American Decades
Jackson, Jesse 1941-
CANDIDATE FOR THE DEMOCRATIC
PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION, 1984
AND 1988
Breaking New Ground.
The Reverend Jesse Jackson made history in 1984, when he campaigned to be the Democratic candidate for the presidency of the United States. Though Democratic congresswoman Shirley Chisholm became the first black to seek the presidential nomination of a large, national party when she entered some Democratic primaries in 1972, Jackson was the first African American to wage a full-scale campaign to head a major-party ticket.
Background.
An illegitimate child born to an impoverished family in Greenville, South Carolina, Jackson graduated from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in 1963. He went on to study at the Chicago Theological Seminary, dropping out in spring 1965, six months before his expected graduation, to become active in the civil rights movement. In 1967 Dr. Martin Luther King...
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1980's Government and Politics
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Topics in the News
- The Cold War
- The Cold War: Thaw
- The Cold War: Third World Woes
- The Middle East
- The Middle East, Central America, and the Iran-Contra Scandal
- National Politics: Republican Nomination Race 1980
- National Politics: Democratic Nomination Race 1980
- National Politics: 1980 Elections
- National Politics: 1982 Elections
- National Politics: Republican Nomination Race 1984
- National Politics: Democratic Nomination Race 1984
- National Politics: 1984 Elections
- National Politics: 1986 Elections
- National Politics: Democratic Nomination Race 1988
- National Politics: Republican Nomination Race 1988
- The New Right
- Reaganomics
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1980–1989
