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Timeline: Life of a Legend
Cecil A. Reed (1913-2006)
Born October 23, 1913, to William Garrett and Julia Reed, in
Collinsville, Illinois.
1923--Moved to Cedar Rapids, after living in Davenport, Omaha,
and Estherville.
1932--Graduated from Washington High School in Cedar Rapids.
1935-1944--With his sister Edith and brother Wally, formed The
Three Gold Flashes, which performed variety acts for many
years at clubs and functions in Cedar Rapids and the Midwest.
1930s-1950s--Cecils parents, and later his
family, hosted famous black entertainers at their home. It created
Cecils national network of friends, including Louis Armstrong,
Cab Calloway, Duke Ellington, Sonny Price, Count Basie, Jimmy
Lunceford, Noble Sissle, the Four Cleffs, the Step Brothers, the
Nicholas Brothers, the King Cole Trio, and Louie Jordan and his
Timpany Five.
1936--Married Evelyn Collins, daughter of the minister at Bethel
AME Church in Cedar Rapids. The couple moved to Davenport to be
close to her parents during her first pregnancy. Carol Reed was
born in 1939.
1939--Moved back to Cedar Rapids, worked as a janitor, dishwasher,
cook, and chef, until hired to run the Foxhead Tavern. One of
Cecils duties was to hire bands to play at the Tavern. He
often traveled to Chicago and hired bands through Beryl Adams,
a talent agent. On one trip, Cecil visited a showbar and heard
a new group called the King Cole Trio. He told Adams about their
unique sound. Adams took Nat King Cole on as a client,
and Cecil may have been responsible for promoting one of the greatest
musicians in history.
1940s--Founded Reeds Floor Maintenance, employing
his family members and as many as 15 workers at a time. The business
grew to include Reeds Floor Store and Reeds Floor
Sanding and Finishing.
1943--Son Richard Reed was born.
1948--Son Michael Reed was born.
1948--Cecil received a diploma certifying him as a floor maintenance
expert through a correspondence school. His only formal education
was in high school and through correspondence schools.
1950s--Cecil serves on the Cedar Rapids Chamber of Commerce
Board (he was the first African American to chair a committee)
and the Cedar Rapids Symphony Board (the first African American
to do so).
1952--Son David Reed was born.
1953--The Reed family moved to Bertram Road SE, at the time a
rural area with sparse housing. Neighbors contested the Reed familys
move, but the family eventually won them over. Cecil built a park
on the property, complete with a midget race track, merry-go-round,
tennis court, ponies and horses, and a swimming hole. Cecil later
donated the land for Lincoln Park, and received the first Social
Action Award from the Catholic Center of Cedar Rapids.
1954--In response to the lack of accommodations for black travelers,
the Reed family opened Motel Sepia on their property, which was
a part of the Lincoln Highway. The cozy cabins, although trumpeted
as accommodations for blacks, welcomed all travelers for ten years,
before becoming rental housing. The Motel Sepia was listed in
the Nationwide Hotel Associations guidebook for black travelers.
1964--The Reed family was the subject of a large feature article
in the Des Moines Register, Small Businessman, Big Citizen,
by Joan Liffring.
1966--Cecil was elected the only African American Republican
to serve in the Iowa legislature. Richard Nixon campaigned on
his behalf.
1967--Cecil Reed was sworn in to the State Legislature. He served
on the Iowa board of the Migrants Action Committee. He successfully
sponsored bills for a new highway between Cedar Rapids and Iowa
City, a new four-lane highway to run along Lincoln Highway route,
a new community-college system for teaching vocational and technical
skills (our current community college system), and a fair-housing
act that extended federal guarantees to citizens in Iowa under
his leadership. The Fair Housing Act of 1967, passed unanimously.
Cecil also had the privilege of presiding over the Iowa House
during the absence of the speaker, making him the only African
American to have had that duty.
1967--After
six months in the legislature, Governor Harold Hughes appointed
Cecil commissioner of the Iowa Employment Security Commission,
the first African American in any state to hold that position.
Cecil managed the state unemployment insurance program, the employment
service program, and the Iowa Public Employees Retirement System
(IPERS). He directed 550 employees throughout the state of Iowa.
The Reed family moved to Des Moines.
1968--Governor Robert Ray appointed Cecil to the Governors
Educational Advisory Committee. He worked with the Board of Educational
Broadcasting to produce a television and radio series on black
history.
1968--Served as chair of the Iowa division of the United Nations
Human Rights Committee, and served on the national board of directors.
Cecil also founded the Northern Brotherhood Leadership Conference.
1969--Cecil became the executive assistant for the Regional Administrator
for Equal Opportunity, Department of Labor, assuming the role
of Equal Opportunity Employment Specialist for the Kansas City
Manpower Administration. In his new position, he was charged to
prevent discrimination against minorities employed in Colorado,
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North and South
Dakota, and Utah.
1971--Cecil was appointed the Assistant Administrator for Job
Corps. In this position, he implemented programs to help youth,
new contractors, and others acquire training for employment and
contract proposals.
1974--Cecil was appointed Assistant Regional Administrator, United
States Dept. of Labor, Area Operations for Employment and Training
Programs. Cecil stated that this really was just a name
change, that his duties were still to make people
employable.
1979--Cecil was appointed Assistant Regional Administrator for
Job Service.
1983--Cecil
retired from government employment. He began a new career as a
public speaker. His duties included 16-20 trips per year to Shepherdstown,
West Virginia, to speak to the Department of Labors Management
Trainee classes; trips to Arizona to speak annually at commencement
addresses; and an annual speaking tour in Europe.
1993--Cecil served as chairman of the Mark Twain Bank of Shawnee
Mission, Kansas, Advisory Board.
1993--Cecils memoir, Fly in the Buttermilk, was published
by the University of Iowa Press as part of its Singular
Lives series.
1995--Cecil became active in the African American Historical
Museum and Cultural Center of Iowa. He became an honorary life
member.
2001-2--Cecil continued to touch the lives of young people. He
participated in two oral history projects, one by students at
Cornell College, and the other by Metro High School students.
He remained friends with the teachers and students long after
the projects ended.
2003--Cecil was named a community Hero by the Cedar Rapids Freedom
Festival.
2006--Cecil was named Member of the Year by the Lincoln
Highway Association.
The major source for this timeline was Fly in the Buttermilk,
Cecil Reeds autobiography. The book is available in the
Nikee Gift Shop.
Call 319-862-2101 ext. 10 for more information.
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