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NGE >> Government and Politics >> Politics >> People >> Ivan Allen Jr. (1911-2003) |
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Ivan Allen Jr. (1911-2003) Ivan Allen Jr. served as mayor of Atlanta from 1962 to 1970.
Allen was born in Atlanta on March 15, 1911, the only son of Ivan Allen Sr., the founder of the Ivan Allen Company, an office products company, and Irene Beaumont Allen. After graduating from the local Boys High School, Allen attended the Georgia Institute of Technology from 1929 to 1933, majoring in business administration. After graduation he went to work for his father's company. He married Louise Richardson, the granddaughter of the influential Atlanta businessman Hugh T. Inman, on January 1, 1936. They had three sons, Ivan III, Inman, and Beaumont. Serving in the U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps during World War II (1941-45), Allen entered the service in 1942 as a second lieutenant and was discharged in 1945 as a major. After the war he served as Governor Ellis Arnall's executive secretary before becoming the president of the family business in 1946, when his father retired. Allen was involved in community service long before becoming mayor. He headed Atlanta's Community Chest drive in 1947. In this role he was the first white man asked to attend the black division's kickoff dinner. After he was elected president of the chamber of commerce in 1960, he launched the "Forward Atlanta" campaign to promote the city's image and attract new business and investment. Allen ran for mayor in 1961 and defeated Lester Maddox. He took office in 1962 and served two four-year terms.
Allen was the only southern elected official to testify before Congress in support of the public accommodations section of President John F. Kennedy's proposed civil rights bill. He knew that his testimony, in July 1963, would prove very unpopular among his Georgia constituents. The bill became law the following year as the Civil Rights Act of 1964, but even before it passed, many Atlanta restaurants, hotels, and other public facilities had desegregated by mutual agreement between their owners and Mayor Allen. In 1962 the mayor made one serious blunder in regard to Atlanta's race relations. Urged by whites in southwest Atlanta, the city constructed a concrete barrier that closed Peyton Road to black home seekers from nearby Gordon Road. The incident, later known as the Peyton Road affair, drew national attention and caused newspapers around the country to question Atlanta's motto, "the City Too Busy to Hate." The "Atlanta wall," as some newspapers called it, was ruled unconstitutional by the courts and was torn down. Allen was also responsible for construction of the Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium and for bringing the Braves baseball team to Atlanta.
After Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in 1968, Allen helped arrange King's funeral. When tensions erupted a few days after the funeral in Summerhill, a neighborhood south of the stadium, Allen went to the site of the riot and climbed on top of a police car with a bullhorn to plead for calm. Allen also flew to Paris, France, to help identify the bodies of the Atlantans who perished in the Orly plane crash in 1962. Many of these people, members of the Atlanta Art Association, had been personal friends, and he felt that their families would want him there. During Allen's tenure as mayor, Atlanta ranked in the top ten in the nation in downtown construction, with more than 55 new buildings and 22,000 new jobs a year, and the $13 million Memorial Arts Center and the $9 million Atlanta Civic Center were built. MARTA, the city's rapid transit system, was proposed and mapped during the Allen years but was voted down. He oversaw the early phases of construction of the Interstate 285 perimeter and the Downtown Connector, in an attempt to manage the vast increase in traffic brought on by the city's growth. In 1981 Allen received the Martin Luther King Jr. Nonviolent Peace Prize, presented by Coretta Scott King. He died in Sandy Springs on July 2, 2003, at the age of ninety-two. Suggested Reading Frederick Allen, Atlanta Rising: The Invention of an International City, 1946-1996 (Atlanta: Longstreet Press, 1996). Gary M. Pomerantz, Where Peachtree Meets Sweet Auburn: The Saga of Two Families and the Making of Atlanta (New York: Scribner, 1996). Tammy H. Galloway, Smyrna Published 8/23/2004 |
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