The Housing and Urban Development Headquarters
Building in Washington has been renamed in honor of Robert C. Weaver, the
first HUD Secretary and the first African American member of a President's
Cabinet.
HUD Secretary Andrew Cuomo was joined for the
renaming on July 1 by Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Congressman
Charles Rangel, both of New York, and both of whom sponsored legislation
renaming the building the Robert C. Weaver Federal Building. The building
was originally dedicated by Weaver on September 9, 1968.
"Robert Weaver was a pioneer who broke through
barriers of racism again and again, to build a life of extraordinary
achievement and public service," Cuomo said. "His brilliance, his talents,
his hard work, and his dedication to a better America drove him forward to
make history and to make our nation a better place. He is a role model and
an inspiration for all of us at HUD."
Senator Moynihan said: "How fitting that we
name for Bob Weaver today a building that fulfills President Kennedy's
call for the "choice of designs that embody the finest contemporary
American architectural thought. "As with the building, so with the man who
brought it about ÐÐ "the finest contemporary American."
Congressman Rangel said: "Anyone who knows of
Dr. Weaver's achievements is aware that his activities have greatly
enhanced the American way of life, for much of what he did helped many
throughout the country achieve a piece of what we have come to call the
"American Dream."
Weaver, who served as HUD Secretary from 1966
to 1968, was born in Washington, DC, in 1907. He died on July 17,
1997.
In 1961, President John F. Kennedy appointed
Weaver to head the Housing and Home Finance Agency ÐÐ a collection of
agencies that included the Federal Housing Administration, Urban Renewal
Administration and the Federal National Mortgage Association.
When President Lyndon B. Johnson elevated the
agency to Cabinet level in January 1966, he nominated Weaver to become
Secretary, rejecting objections from some for the appointment of an
African American to the Cabinet.
Weaver served as HUD Secretary until December
1968. During his tenure at HUD, Weaver is credited with increasing the
availability of affordable housing, fighting to end housing discrimination
by working for the passage of the landmark Fair Housing Act, and launching
a comprehensive revitalization of America's urban centers.
Weaver graduated from Dunbar High School in
Washington and went on to earn undergraduate and graduate degrees from
Harvard University.
Weaver began his career in public service in
1934 in various positions at the Department of the Interior and as part of
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Black Cabinet," an informal advisory
group that focused on jobs, education and equal rights for the nation's
African Americans.
In 1955, Weaver was appointed Deputy Rent
Commissioner for the State of New York. He later became the first African
American to serve in the New York State Cabinet when he was appointed
Commissioner.
After his tenure at HUD, Weaver held teaching
positions at Hunter College, Carnegie-Mellon University, Columbia's
Teachers" College and the New York University School of Education, and
also served as President of Baruch College. In the 1970s, he was one of
the original directors of the Municipal Assistance Corporation, formed to
help rescue New York City from financial crisis.
Weaver was married to Ella V. Haith from 1935
until she died in 1991. They had one son, who died in 1962.
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