- Kenneth A. Gibson
Infobox Officeholder
name = Kenneth Gibson
caption =
order = 34th Mayor of Newark
term_start = 1970
term_end = 1986
predecessor =Hugh Addonizio
successor =Sharpe James
birth_date = birth date and age |1932|5|15
birth_place =Enterprise, Alabama
death_date =
death_place =
constituency =
party = Democratic Party
spouse =
profession =
religion =
footnotes =Kenneth Allen Gibson (born May 15, 1932, in
Enterprise, Alabama ) is an American Democratic Partypolitician , who was elected in 1970 as the 34thMayor of Newark,New Jersey , the largest city in the state. He was the first African American elected mayor of any majorNortheastern U.S. city. He served from 1970 to 1986.Early life and education
Gibson studied civil engineering in college.
Career
Gibson worked as an
engineer for theNew Jersey Highway Department from 1950 to 1960. From 1960 to 1966, he was Chief Engineer for theNewark Housing Authority , and ChiefStructural Engineer for the city from 1966 to 1970.Mayoral career
When elected in 1970, Gibson noted that "Newark may be the most decayed and financially crippled city in the nation." He entered office as a reformer, since the prior administration was corrupt. The same year that Gibson was elected, the previous mayor
Hugh Addonizio was convicted ofextortion and conspiracy.Gibson was also a representative of the city's large African-American population, many of whom were migrants or whose parents or grandparents had come North in the
Great Migration . The city's industrial power had diminished sharply.Deindustrialization since the 1950s cost tens of thousands of jobs when African Americans were still arriving fromthe South looking for opportunity.Combined with forces of suburbanization and racial tensions, the city encountered problems similar to those of other major industrial cities of the North and Midwest in the 1960s - increasing poverty and dysfunction for families left without employment. The city was scarred by race riots in 1967, three years before Gibson took office. Many businesses and residents who could, left the city after the riots.
Gibson's election was seen by some in almost
prophetic terms.Poet andplaywright Amiri Baraka wrote, "We will nationalize the city's institutions, as if it were liberated territory inZimbabwe orAngola ." Gibson himself said, "Wherever American cities are going, Newark will get there first." Gibson entered and with his new city council "challenged the corporate sector's tax arrangements and pushed business interests to take a more active and responsible role in the community" (Dolan, part 3).By 1974, Gibson had alienated some of his supporters in his efforts to keep businesses from leaving the city. One of them, poet Amira Baraka, labeled him a "neo-colonialist and complained that Gibson was "for the profit of Prudential, Public (private) Service, Port Authority, and other huge corporations that run in and around and through and out of Newark paying little or no taxes" while the residents were ignored. [ [http://www.newarkmetro.rutgers.edu/reports/display.php?id=17&page=3 Thomas Dolan, "Newark and Its Gateway Complex, Part 3: A Weakened City", "The Newark Metro"] , Rutgers Newark Online, accessed 25 May 2008] Corporate and state interests had major influence in the city.
In 1976, Gibson became the first African-American president of the
U.S. Conference of Mayors .After 16 years under Gibson and mostly Republican national administrations, the city’s unemployment rate had risen nearly 50 percent, its population had continued dropping, it had no movie theaters, only one supermarket remained, and only two-thirds of its high school students were graduating. In 1986 challenger
Sharpe James defeated Gibson in his attempt to be reelected for a fifth term. [ [http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_2_cory_booker.html Cory Booker’s Battle for Newark by Steven Malanga, City Journal Spring 2007 ] ]Legal troubles
During his last term, Gibson was indicted on conspiracy and
misconduct charges but was acquitted at trial. He was later indicted forbribery and for stealing funds from aschool construction project in nearbyIrvington, New Jersey . His law firm pleaded guilty tofraud , while Gibson himself pleaded guilty totax fraud in 2002.Newark political corruption
Gibson's predecessor and successor as Mayor of Newark were also convicted of 'white-collar' criminal offenses. Sharpe James was convicted of federal fraud charges in 2007.
Sources
*"Gibson, Kenneth." "Britannica Student Encyclopedia." 2005.
*Kleinknecht, William. "Gibson Gets Three Years Probation." "Star-Ledger ",November 1 ,2002 .
* [http://www.newarkmetro.rutgers.edu/reports/display.php?id=17&page=3 Dolan, Thomas, "Newark and Its Gateway Complex." "Rutgers Online"]
*Woodard, Komozi. "A Nation Within a Nation: Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) and Black Power Politics". Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1999.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.