Civil rights leader Benjamin Hooks has died after a long illness. He was a lawyer, a minister, a criminal court judge and he led the NAACP from 1977 to 1993. In 2007, Benjamin Hooks received the ...
Civil rights leader Benjamin Hooks, who died Thursday at 85, revived the NAACP as the organization began to falter in the years following the peak of the civil rights movement. In 15 years as ...
NASHVILLE — Civil rights leader Benjamin L. Hooks, who shrugged off courtroom slurs as a young lawyer before earning a pioneering judgeship and reviving a flagging NAACP, died Thursday in Memphis. He ...
Benjamin L. Hooks was a pioneering civil rights leader, attorney, minister, and businessman from Memphis. He became the first African American criminal court judge in Tennessee in 1965 and the first ...
Benjamin Hooks was a figure of great influence in Memphis, known for his leadership and commitment to bettering the lives of those around him. Born and raised in the city, he worked tirelessly to ...
Jurist, lawyer, fabled minister, and icon of the civil rights movement, the Rev. Benjamin Hooks was as universally beloved a figure, both in Memphis and in the world at large, as it was possible to be ...
As the nation mourns the death of civil rights warrior Benjamin Hooks, who lead the NAACP from 1977 to 1992 as executive director, it’s easy to forget one important thing that distinguished him from ...
Subscribe to The St. Louis American‘s free weekly newsletter for critical stories, community voices, and insights that matter. Sign up WASHINGTON (NNPA) – The news of the death of former NAACP ...
NASHVILLE -- Civil rights leader Benjamin L. Hooks, who shrugged off courtroom slurs as a young lawyer before earning a pioneering judgeship and later reviving a flagging NAACP, died Thursday in ...
This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today. Civil rights leader Benjamin Hooks ...
Benjamin L. Hooks was a leader I truly admired. Growing up in Hardeman County, about 70 miles from Memphis, I often saw him on Memphis television and read about him in The Commercial Appeal. There was ...