Morris Jackson Explained

Morris Jackson
Image Name:File:M. M. Jackson - Senate District - 21st Ohio Senate 112th General Assemby 1977-1978 - DPLA - e9414839d7ad388bfa2619d70cf07f58 (page 8) (cropped).jpg
State Senate:Ohio
State:Ohio
District:21st
Term:January 3, 1967 – March 17, 1984
Preceded:Districts Created
Succeeded:Michael R. White
Party:Democratic
Birth Date:1 April 1918
Birth Place:Araba, Georgia[1]
Death Place:Cleveland, Ohio

M. Morrison Jackson (April 1, 1918 – December 12, 2004) was a member of the Ohio Senate.

A native of Cleveland, Jackson served in the state Senate from 1967 to 1984. The most senior African American Senator at his time, he held a number of leadership roles during his time. In 1982, upon the Senate's switch to a Democratic majority, Jackson was involved in a Republican coup in which he was promised the position of Senate President if he switched party affiliations. Ultimately, however, he remained with Democrats, and Harry Meshel became the next Senate leader.[2]

He retired in 1984, and was succeeded by future Cleveland Mayor Michael R. White.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Local Leadership in Black Communities: Organizational and Electoral Developments in Cleveland in the Nineteen Sixties. Chatterjee. Pranab. Wolford. Louise. 1975.
  2. Book: Ohio politics. 0-87338-509-8. Alexander P. Lamis http://politicalscience.case.edu/faculty/lamis/, Mary Anne Sharkey. 1994.