Civil rights giant, Clinton adviser Vernon Jordan dies

ATLANTA - Former presidents and everyday Americans were among those paying tribute Tuesday to Vernon Jordan, a civil rights leader and a close adviser to former President Bill Clinton. Jordan passed away Monday night. He was 85.

His death was confirmed in a statement to The New York Times by his daughter, Vickee Jordan. She also released a statement to CBS News, saying, "My father passed away last night around 10p surrounded by loved ones his wife and daughter by his side."

A cause of death has not been released.

Clinton, along with another former president, Barack Obama, were among those recalling their friendship with Jordan and his inspiration.

Vernon Eulion Jordan Jr., was born in Atlanta on Aug. 15, 1935, the second of Vernon and Mary Belle Jordan's three sons. Until Jordan was 13, the family lived in public housing. But he was exposed to Atlanta's elite through his mother, who worked as a caterer for many of the city's affluent citizens.

Jordan was an honor graduate of David Tobias Howard High School. Rejected for a summer intern's job with an insurance company after his sophomore year in college because of his race, he earned money for a few summers for college by working as a chauffeur to former city mayor Robert Maddox, then a banker.

Jordan graduated from DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana, in 1957, with a degree in political science, where he was the only Black in his class and one of five at the college. He then attended Howard University School of Law in Washington, and returned to Atlanta to join the law office of Donald L. Hollowell, a civil rights activist.

Jordan was part of the legal team that helped Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes win admission as UGA's first African American students in 1961.

After leaving private law practice in the early 1960s, Jordan became directly involved in activism in the field, serving as the Georgia field director for the NAACP, then moved on to the Southern Regional Council and then to the Voter Education Project. During his two years in the role, Jordan built new chapters, coordinated demonstrations and boycotted businesses that would not employ Blacks. He also later organized voter registration drives in the South, headed the United Negro College Fund and National Urban League.

Jordan considered running for Georgia's 5th Congressional District seat in 1970, but was tapped that year to head the United Negro College Fund. Holding the position for just 12 months, Jordan used his fundraising skills to fill the organization's coffers with $10 million to help students at historically Black colleges and universities.

In 1971, after the death of Whitney Young Jr., Jordan was named the fifth president of the National Urban League, which is dedicated to empowering African Americans to enter the economic and social mainstream.

"I believe that working with the Urban League, the NAACP, PUSH and SCLC is the highest form of service that you can perform for Black people," Jordan said in a December 1980 interview in Ebony Magazine.

His friendship with Clinton, which began in the 1970s, evolved into a partnership and political alliance. He met Clinton as a young politician in Arkansas, and the two connected over their Southern roots.

On May 29, 1980, Jordan was shot and seriously wounded outside the Marriott Inn in Fort Wayne, Indiana, by a white supremacist. Jordan left the Urban League and joined the Washington, D.C., law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer and Feld.

Jordan was a key campaign adviser to Clinton during his first presidential campaign and co-chaired Clinton's transition team. He remained close to the Clintons for the next decades, endorsing both of Hillary Clinton's presidential campaigns.

Although Jordan held held no official role in the Clinton White House, he was highly influential and had such labels as the "first friend."

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