
Jesse Jackson has firmly established himself as one of the most dynamic
forces for social and political action in both the national and international
arenas. He has campaigned for economic justice, human rights, world peace, and
the United States presidency. An inspirational speaker, committed activist, and
tireless and confident campaigner, Jackson began his career as a foot soldier
in the Civil Rights movement of the 196Os and has developed into a leader of
millions of Americans--black and white--a "rainbow coalition" of the nation's
dispossessed and disenfranchised.
Jackson has drawn upon his own early experience in Greenville, South Carolina,
to relate to his constituency. He was born on October 8, 1941, to a seventeen-year-old
unwed high school student and her older, comfortably middle-class neighbor,
a married man. Jackson's ancestry includes black slaves, a Cherokee, and a
white plantation owner. Although the young Jackson was quite aware of poverty
and illegitimacy, his mother, grandmother, and stepfather were always able to
attend to family needs. Even so, his knowledge of social inequities and of his
more privileged half brothers affected him. As Barbara Reynolds wrote in her
biography Jesse Jackson: America's David: "Every teacher Jesse came into contact
with took note of his insecurities, masked by a stoic sense of superiority. They
\ never perceived him as brilliant, but rather each saw him as a charmer, a spirited,
fierce competitor with an almost uncanny drive to prove himself by always winning,
always being number one in everything." At Sterling High School Jackson was elected
president of his class, the honor society, and the student council, was named state
officer of the Future Teachers of America, finished tenth in his class, and lettered
in football, basketball, and baseball.
In 1959 Jackson left the South to attend the University of Illinois on an athletic
scholarship. During his first year, however, he became dissatisfied with his treatment
on campus and on the gridiron and decided to transfer to Greensboro's North Carolina
Agricultural and Technical College, a predominantly black institution. There he was
quarterback, honor student, fraternity officer, and president of the student body.
After receiving his B.A. in sociology he accepted a Rockefeller grant to attend the
Chicago Theological Seminary, where he planned to train for the ministry. Jackson was
ordained a Baptist minister in 1968, though he had not finished his course work at CTS,
having instead left in 1966 to commit himself full-time to the Civil Rights movement.
Jackson first became involved in the Civil Rights movement while a student at North Carolina
A&T. There he joined the Greensboro chapter of the Council on Racial Equality (CORE),
an organization that had led early sit-ins to protest segregated lunch counters. In 1963
Jackson organized numerous marches, sit-ins, and mass arrests to press for the desegregation
of local restaurants and theaters. His leadership in these events earned him recognition
within the regional movement; he was chosen president of the North Carolina Intercollegiate
Council on Human Rights, field director of CORE's southeastern operations, and in 1964 served
as delegate to the Young Democrats National Convention. In Chicago in 1965 Jackson was a
volunteer for the Coordinating Committee of Community Organizations and organized regular
meetings of local black ministers and the faculty of the Chicago Theological Seminary.
Jackson launched his first campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1984.
His appeals for social programs, voting rights, and affirmative action for those neglected
by Reaganomics earned him strong showings in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, New York, Louisiana,
and Washington, D.C. He received 3.5 million votes, enough to secure a measure of power
and respect at the Democratic convention.