Draft:Frank D. Reeves

Frank Daniel Reeves (March 23, 1916 - April 8, 1973) was an African American lawyer, civil rights activist, and politician. He earned undergraduate and law degrees (1939) from Howard University, where he also taught on-and-off until his death.

Reeves worked at the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People with Thurgood Marshall on the Brown v. Board of Education case that ended racial segregation in the United States (1954), and later was a litigant on Griffin v. County School Board of Prince Edward County (1964).

Reeves served then-Candidate John F. Kennedy as a minority affairs adviser during his 1960 campaign, and ran for and was elected as the first African American member of the Democratic National Committee in 1960, where he seconded Kennedy's nomination as the Democratic Party's Presidential Candidate. After Kennedy became President of the United States in January 1960, Reeves became the first African American to serve as a Presidential administrative assistant.

The Frank D. Reeves Municipal Center in Washington, D.C., is named after Frank D. Reeves.

He was a founding member of the National Conference of Black Lawyers in 1969.

He died six weeks after suffering a stroke on Sunday, April 8, 1973 in Freedmen's Hospital (now Howard University Hospital) in Washington DC.

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