[Congressional Record Volume 152, Number 125 (Friday, September 29, 2006)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E1967-E1968]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PERRY PARKS
______
HON. DIANE E. WATSON
of california
in the house of representatives
Friday, September 29, 2006
Ms. WATSON. Mr. Speaker, it is with much sadness that I rise today to
announce the passing of my very good friend and colleague, Perry
Conrade Parks, Jr.
Perry Parks was born in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1908, to Professors
Perry C. Parks, Sr. and Sophia Parker Parks on the campus of Clark
Atlanta University in Atlanta, Georgia. The family moved to East
Chicago, Indiana, where Perry attended school.
Perry Parks later attended Tennessee State College and transferred to
Wiley College in Marshall, Texas where he lettered in four sports
(football, basketball, track, and tennis) and graduated in 1934.
After graduation he joined his family in Los Angeles and took a job
as a social worker for the California State Relief Administration. Soon
after establishing himself in California, he married his college
sweetheart, Artemisia Stilwell.
[[Page E1968]]
Perry Parks later worked for the Federal Postal Service, from 1936 to
1971. He was a founding member of the United Public Workers CIO, as
well as an organizer of the National Alliance of Postal Workers. He was
in the forefront of the struggle to implement a merit system in
employee evaluations and promotions. He was also a champion of equal
opportunity for women.
He filed the first successful anti-discrimination claim against the
Los Angles Post Master for failure to promote him to Supervisor. His
discrimination claim paved the way for equal employment opportunities
for people of color, leading to the appointment of the first African-
American Post Master in Los Angeles.
Perry was an ardent warrior in the pursuit of fairness, inclusion,
and representation in the civic process. He stood on the front line of
the civil rights movement in the 1960s as an early organizer of the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Southern California. Mr.
Parks served as Vice President of the Barrio Defense Committee,
President of the South Central Welfare Planning Council, and a board
member of the Los Angeles Urban League and United Civil Rights
Committee. He was a founding member of the Brotherhood Crusade.
After his retirement, Perry Parks continued to serve his community as
Field Representative for Congresswoman Yvonne B. Burke and
Assemblywoman Teresa Hughes.
Perry Parks was a proud army veteran of World War II and a devoted
member of Holman United Methodist Church. He is survived by his two
sons, Perry C. Parks III and Henry Stilwell Parks; his two sisters,
Lucy Hamilton and Carrie Jones, all of Los Angeles; his grandsons,
Perry C. Parks IV of Atlanta, Georgia, and Oren Callan Jeffries of Los
Angeles; nieces Patricia Parks White, Frances Jones Taylor, Muriel
Jones Parker of Los Angeles and a host of other devoted relatives and
friends.
____________________