Talk:Edward Brooke
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Biography: Politics and Government Start‑class | ||||||||||
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First African American ??
First African Americen to be elected Senator? How about Blanche Bruce and Hiram Rhoades Revels --170.35.208.20 20:24, 25 July 2005 (UTC)
- Rhodes and Bruce went to the Senate before the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment which stipulated direct election of Senators. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Shsilver (talk • contribs) 16:44, 25 July 2005 (UTC)
If any of you REALLY want know who Edward W Brooke is, please read his book, BRIDGING THE DIVIDE. Ed Brooke reconizes he was the first African American to be elected since reconstruction. I went to a book signing. Spoke of this. There have been only five African Americans every elected to the Senate. Hiram Rhoades Revels 1870, Blanche Kelso Bruce 1870, Edward W Brook 1966, Carol Mosely Braun 1993, and Barack Obama 2004. As to his COLOR, he has been fighting cancer. His treatments my have been the cause. If Ed Brooke saw this question, he would be very disappointed. I leave you will what he wrote in my ll year old daughter's book: "With best wishs for a life filled with purpose, achivement, and joy!" Sincerly Ed Brooke
Presidential Medal of Freedom - no citation
Brooke is listed in Category:Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients and the List of notable Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients#U.S. Members of Congress, but there is nothing in his article about it ... can someone please provide a date or something? —Dennette 19:51, 18 November 2006 (UTC) boom
?
Is it just me or is Edward Brooke so light-skinned, he looks like a white man?24.185.49.151 19:37, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
- yeah, he may be african american, but he's certainly not black.
Keynote Speaker?
I did not add this, as I can't find a reference to this anywhere online or in Wikipedia, but I believe that Senator Brooke was the keynote speaker to the Republican National Convention in 1968. This probably makes him the first African-American to be a keynote speaker to a major American party's convention. Can anyone back that up? Henrymrx 19:20, 31 July 2007 (UTC)