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Civic Unity Committee

Seattle’s Civic Unity Committee (CUC), a primarily white civil rights organization, lobbied for civil rights laws and sought to persuade the white community not to discriminate. A large-scale migration of blacks to Seattle during the Second World War increased racial tensions, prompting Seattle Mayor William Devin to create the CUC in 1944. Devin appointed prominent business, civic, religious, and labor leaders to the CUC--seven white men, two white women, two black men, and one Chinese-American man in all--but pointedly refused to select anyone seen as “left-wing.” The CUC negotiated with a number of firms that refused to hire blacks, but generally failed to end the discrimination. The CUC did, however, play a major role in ensuring that the return of interned Japanese Americans to Seattle went peacefully. The CUC ran employment and rental referral services for returning Japanese Americans and convinced local newspapers to condemn anti-Japanese discrimination.

When the fear of racial violence ebbed after the war, Mayor Devin cut the CUC’s ties with city government. The CUC reorganized as a private organization, funded by the King County Community Chest and by members’ donations. The number of members generally hovered around 1,000.

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Civic Unity Committee (Seattle, Wash.)

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6bp72vh (corporateBody)

Seattle's Civic Unity Committee (CUC), a civil rights organization that existed between 1944-1964, lobbied for civil rights laws and fought employment and housing discrimination. Existing racial tensions in Seattle had been exacerbated with an influx of African American workers during the Second World War, prompting Mayor William Devin to establish the Committee. While unsuccessful in its initial attempts to end discriminatory hiring practices against African Americans, ...

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