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Affiliation | Democratic |
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1967-01-01 |
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Name | Cecil Partee |
Address | 516 East 62nd Street Chicago, Illinois , United States |
Email | None |
Website | None |
Born |
April 10, 1921
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Died | August 16, 1994
(73 years)
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Contributor | COSDem |
Last Modifed | ev Mar 15, 2023 09:12pm |
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Info | Cecil Armillo Partee (1921-1994) was an African-American lawyer and politician who served in a variety of public service roles in Illinois and Chicago. His career record reflects many firsts as an African-American and he affected policy to improve opportunities for both African-Americans and other minorities.
Born on April 10, 1921 in Blytheville, Arkansas, Partee was raised as an only child in a middle-class family in a segregated society. His father was a cotton classifier and his mother was a teacher in the Arkansas segregated school system. Unable to attend college in his home state due to his skin color, Partee accepted Arkansas' offer to pay for a four-year degree at Tennessee State University. There he served as a member of the debate team and an editor of the student newspaper, and as a member of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity on campus.
After graduation in 1944, Partee came to Chicago to attend law school at Northwestern University. He graduated in 1946 with his law degree and went to work in the law offices of Joseph Clayton, after which he served as an assistant state's attorney. In 1956, he was first elected to the Illinois General Assembly, where he served until 1976. He held several leadership roles during his legislative tenure, including service as Chairman of the House Elections Committee, President pro-tempore, majority leader and, since reconstruction, the first African-American president of the senate.
In 1976, Partee earned the nomination of the Democratic Party for the position of Attorney General, the first African-American to do so in Illinois. He went on to lose the election, afterward serving as Commissioner of the Department of Human Services of Chicago. In 1979, he was elected city treasurer, a position he held until Richard M. Daley appointed him to the position of Cook County State's Attorney upon Daley's own mayoral election in 1989. Partee was defeated when he ran for that office in the following election cycle of 1990.
Partee married his wife Paris in 1955. Together they had two daughters, Paris and Cecile. He was an avid golfer, won numerous awards, and received three honorary doctoral degrees. He died of lung cancer in 1994.
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