William Sylvester White Explained

Honorific Prefix:the Honorable
William Sylvester White
Office:Illinois Appellate Court
Appointer:James R. Thompson
Term Start:1980
Term End:1991
Office1:Cook County Juvenile Court
Term Start1:1964
Term End1:1980
Birth Name:William Sylvester White
Birth Date:July 27, 1914
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Death Place:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Spouse:George Vivian Bridgeforth
Children:Carolyn Marie White Craven
Sala Marilyn White Steinbach
Signature:WSWsignature.png
Branch:United States Navy
Serviceyears:1943–1946
Rank: LTJG
Unit:Golden Thirteen
Awards:Lone Sailor Award

William Sylvester White, (July 27, 1914 – February 2, 2004) was a prosecutor, a member of the first cohort of African-Americans commissioned officers in the U.S. Navy, and the second African-American to serve as presiding judge for the Cook County Juvenile Court.[1] [2]

Early life

Born in Chicago, Illinois, on 27 July 1914, William Sylvester White Jr. was the only child of William S. White Sr., a chemist and pharmacist, and Marie Houston White, a public school teacher. Graduates of Fisk University, his parents imparted on William Jr. the importance of education.

William Jr. attended Hyde Park High School in Chicago, then went on to the University of Chicago, where he received a BA in 1935, and a JD in 1937. Upon graduation, he was hired as an assistant U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.[2] [3]

William Jr. married George Vivian Bridgeforth and had twin daughters, Carolyn Marie White Craven and Sala Marilyn White Steinbach.

Golden Thirteen

See main article: Golden Thirteen. At the outbreak of World War II, many educated African Americans found the calls to defend a democratic ideal in Europe rang hollow as they couldn't enjoy the same benefits in the United States, and launched the Double V campaign to demand that if their sons were willing to sacrifice their lives in the war, they should be given the same opportunities for advancement as the rest of the country.[4]

As a result, by the time William enlisted in the Navy in October 1943, the Navy had decided to implement a trial program, selecting 16 African American sailors as Officer Candidates as a segregated class, now known as the Golden Thirteen. Following William's commissioning in February 1944, he served as a Public Affairs Officer at Ninth Naval District and Naval District Washington until he was released from active duty as a Lieutenant Junior Grade in 1946.[5]

Later life and death

After the war William returned to his role at the U.S. Attorney's Office, then headed by Otto Kerner Jr. Upon Kerner's election as Governor in 1961, William would serve as an assistant state's attorney for Cook County.[2]

In 1964, William was appointed as judge for the Cook County Juvenile Court, eventually rising to become the second African-American presiding judge of the court, and honored by the Cook County Bar Association as Judge of the Year in 1972. In 1980 William served as a justice of the Illinois Appellate Court until his retirement in 1991.[3]

William Sylvester White passed away at his home in Hyde park at the age of 89 on February 16, 2004.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Honorable William Sylvester White . thehistorymakers.org.
  2. News: Stillwell . Paul . White, William Sylvester, The Hon. — Member of the Golden Thirteen . U.S. Naval Institute . 1990.
  3. News: Louis-Jacques . Lyonette . Judge William Sylvester ("Syl") White, Jr. (J.D. '37) . The University of Chicago Library News . 1 February 2022.
  4. News: Goldberg . Dan . How the U.S. Navy's First Black Officers Helped Reshape the American Military . Time Magazine . 19 May 2020.
  5. News: Fleet History Support Team . The Golden Thirteen . Naval History and Heritage Command . 25 November 2020.