Rolland Joseph 'Speedy' Curtis was born in Louisiana in 1922. After serving three years in the Marines during World War II, he and his wife, Gloria, relocated from New Orleans to Los Angeles in 1946. Curtis served four years with the Los Angeles Police Department, but resigned from the force in order to pursue both a Bachelor's and Master's degree from USC. He later became involved in city politics, as an associate of Sam Yorty, and later a field deputy to City Council members Billy Mills and Tom Bradley. He was briefly director of the Model Cities program in 1973. Rolland J. Curtis died in his home in 1979, the victim of a homicide. An affordable housing complex on Exposition Blvd. near Vermont Ave. was named in his honor in 1981, along with a nearby street and park.; Photograph included in the Exhibit: Firsts, Seconds and Thirds: African American Leaders in Los Angeles During the 1960s and '70s from the Rolland J. Curtis Collection. Leon H. Washington, Jr. (1907-1974) became the first African American to serve on the Board of Directors of the California Newspaper Publishers Association, and his own newspaper, the Los Angeles Sentinel which began publication in 1933, and is currently the oldest and largest running African American newspaper in Los Angeles. Washington became best known for his "Don't Spend Where You Can't Work" campaign, which boycotted businesses that operated in black communities, but refused to hire black workers. Leon Washington protests the election of the board to oversee Anti-Poverty funds on Spring Street, outside of City Hall and not far from the Los Angeles Times Building (left) and the State Building (right, later demolished). Dated July 12-13, 1965.
Type
image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w;10x13 cm. Photographic prints
Newspaper editors--United States Men--California--Los Angeles Demonstrations--California--Los Angeles Newspaper buildings--California--Los Angeles Streets--California--Los Angeles Lampposts--California--Los Angeles Sidewalks--California--Los Angeles Art deco (Architecture)--California--Los Angeles Lost architecture--California--Los Angeles Art deco (Architecture) Demonstrations Lampposts Lost architecture Men Newspaper buildings Newspaper editors Sidewalks Streets Los Angeles Times Building California State Building (Los Angeles, Calif.) Spring Street (Los Angeles, Calif.) Downtown Los Angeles (Los Angeles, Calif.)
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