Jesse D. Locker Explained

Jesse D. Locker
Office:United States Ambassador to Liberia
President:Dwight D. Eisenhower
Predecessor:Edward Richard Dudley
Successor:Richard Lee Jones
Birth Date:31 May 1891
Birth Place:Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
Death Place:Monrovia, Liberia
Party:Republican
Alma Mater:Howard University
Termstart:October 16, 1953
Termend:April 10, 1955
Office2:Member of the Cincinnati City Council
Termstart2:1941
Termend2:1953

Jesse Dwight Locker (May 31, 1891, College Hill, Cincinnati – April 10, 1955, Monrovia, Liberia) was an attorney, politician and, when he was appointed the American ambassador to Liberia,[1] the second African American appointed as ambassador.[2] His father, Laban Locker, was the first black minister in Ohio to be ordained in the Christian Church. Jesse graduated valedictorian of his class at College Hill High School and graduated from Howard University with a law degree in 1945. He returned to Cincinnati and spent 35 years practicing law. He was elected to the Cincinnati City Council, on the Republican ticket, in 1941, serving almost 12 years. He was the first African American elected to the council. In 1951, Locker was elected its president. Locker also was president of the segregated Hamilton County Bar Association for Negro Lawyers.

While ambassador, Locke led β€œthe multi-faceted negotiations between the private sector (Pan American and US Airlines), the government of Liberia, and the United States, with regards to the operations of the Roberts Field airport, the first international airport in Liberia.”

Locker suffered a stroke on April 4, 1955, in Monrovia and he died there on April 10.

References

  1. Web site: FOREIGN RELATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES, 1952–1954, AFRICA AND SOUTH ASIA, VOLUME XI, PART 1 . Office of the Historian . 4 February 2020.
  2. Web site: McLellan . Carlton . JESSIE DWIGHT LOCKER (1891-1955) . BlackPast . April 2015 . 4 February 2020.

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