Gordon Jamison Davis (born August 7, 1941) is an American lawyer and civic leader. He was born in Chicago in 1941 and has been a resident of New York City since his graduation from Harvard Law School in 1967,[1] and has been a leader in New York City's public, civic, and legal affairs.[1] He was Mayor Ed Koch's first New York City Parks Commissioner[1] and is considered New York's most successful parks commissioner since the Robert Moses era.[2] Since 2012, Davis has been a partner in the New York office of the law firm Venable LLP.

Gordon J. Davis
Parks Commissioner of New York City
In office
January 23, 1978 – April 1, 1983
Appointed byEd Koch
Preceded byJoseph P. Davidson
Succeeded byHenry Stern
Personal details
Born
Gordon Jamison Davis

(1941-08-07) August 7, 1941 (age 83)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Spouse
Peggy Cooper Davis
(m. 1968)
Children1
EducationHyde Park High School
Francis Parker School
Alma materWilliams College (BA)
Columbia University
Harvard University (JD)
OccupationLawyer, Civic Leader

Davis was one of the first African Americans to become a partner in a major New York corporate law firm (Lord Day & Lord, 1983).[1][3] He is the Founding Chairman of Jazz at Lincoln Center,[1][4][5] one of the four Founding Trustees of the Central Park Conservancy,[1] a Founding Member in the first class inducted into the Performing Arts Hall of Fame at Lincoln Center,[6] a Life Trustee of the New York Public Library,[7] an appointee of President Barack Obama to the board of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts,[1][8] and a recipient of an honorary degree (LL.D.) and the Bicentennial Medal from his alma mater, Williams College.[1]

Early life and education

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Davis was born in Chicago on August 7, 1941, where he lived on the South Side in the Woodlawn/Englewood area and then in the Hyde Park-Kenwood neighborhood next to the University of Chicago. His parents were Dr. W. Allison Davis and Elizabeth Stubbs Davis, both Harvard and the University of London trained social anthropologists who collaborated on social-anthropological studies of caste and class in the American South in the 1930s and 1940s.[1][9][10][11] Dr. Davis became the John Dewey Distinguished Professor of Education at the University of Chicago. Earlier, when the university granted Dr. Davis tenure in 1947, he became the first African American to be granted tenure status at any white institution of higher education in the United States.[12] A U.S. postage stamp commemorating Dr. Davis and his work in the social sciences and education of disadvantaged Americans was issued in 1994.[13]

Davis attended the public Hyde Park High School and then the private Francis Parker School. He attended Williams College, where he graduated in 1963. At Williams, Davis was the vice president of the senior honor society Gargoyle and the co-founder and co-chair of the Williams Civil Rights Committee. The Davis Center at Williams College, established in 2012 to address issues of diversity and inclusion, was named for and commemorates the work of Gordon Davis's father and uncle, W. Allison Davis (Williams ’24) and John A. Davis (Williams ’33).[14] In 2022, Williams established the Gordon J. Davis '63 Social and Racial Justice Fellowship.[15]

Following graduate studies at Columbia University (1963-1964), Davis attended Harvard Law School, where he graduated in 1967.[1] He was a founder of the Harvard Law School Black Law Students Association (the first BLSA chapter in the country).[16] He was one of the earliest contributors to the newly established Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review (Volume II of the Review (spring 1967);[17][18] (See various later publications and comments in 1981, 1983, 2004, and 2015).[19][20][21][22]

Career

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Government and public service

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Beginning in the reform administration of New York Mayor John V. Lindsay in 1967, Davis was a special assistant to Lindsay and secretary of the Mayor's Cabinet. In 1973 Lindsay appointed Davis to be a commissioner of the seven-member New York City Planning Commission (during his city planning service Davis was affiliated with the law firm of Poletti Friedan Praskher Feldman).[1] In January 1978 he was appointed by Mayor Edward Koch as Commissioner of Parks and Recreation. As Parks Commissioner from 1978 to spring 1983, Davis was widely credited with reviving and restoring New York's parks after the city's fiscal collapse, and is considered[by whom?] the most successful New York City parks commissioner since the Robert Moses era.[23][2]

Davis' innovations as Parks Commissioner included the urban park rangers, borough decentralization, privatization of the city's 13 golf courses, the revival of Bryant Park through the Bryant Park Restoration Corporation, establishment of the Prospect Park administrator's office, and the founding of the Central Park Conservancy.[24][25][26] Davis was recognized in 2020 by the New York Landmarks Conservancy as a Living Landmark for his outstanding contributions to the city.[27][28]

Following the Koch administration, Davis was a member of Mayor David Dinkins' transition committee and later served as chair of Mayor Michael Bloomberg's 2001-2002 criminal justice transition committee.[29]

Private law practice

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Since 2012, Davis has been a partner in the New York office of Venable LLP. He first became a partner in a large New York firm when he joined Lord Day & Lord in April 1983. At the time, he was one of only five African Americans who were partners in a New York Wall Street–type corporate law firm.[3][30][31] From 1994 to 2012 Davis was a partner at Leboeuf Lamb Green & McRae. In 2001 he took a leave of absence from Leboeuf to serve as president of Lincoln Center Inc.[32][1] Davis has represented a variety of institutions in some of the most important public-private projects in New York City, including the New York Public Library, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Mt. Sinai Medical Center, Amtrak, the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center and the United States Tennis Association, Jazz at Lincoln Center, the American Museum of Natural History, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and the 9/11 Memorial and Museum by the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation.[citation needed]

Davis has been recognized as one of New York's most accomplished lawyers and as one of the nation's top African American lawyers.[33][34] Davis and Conrad Harper of Simpson Thatcher organized the concerted efforts of New York's African American law partners which led the New York Bar Association in the late 1980s to establish the Vance Committee to Enhance Professional Opportunities for Minorities (chaired by Cyrus Vance Sr. and composed of the leaders of New York's 35 major law firms).[35]

Civic and cultural involvement

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Davis is one of four Founding Trustees of the Central Park Conservancy along with Elizabeth Barlow Rogers, William Sperry Beinecke and Richard Gilder. Davis and these three individuals, together with Mayor Koch, conceived and established the Conservancy in 1980–1982. The Conservancy has completely restored and rebuilt and maintains the Olmsted and Vaux landmark Central Park.[36] Davis is the Founding Chairman of Jazz at Lincoln Center (JALC). In 1989 he joined jazz musician and educator Wynton Marsalis, Lincoln Center chairman George Weissman and author Albert Murray to spearhead the founding of JALC.[citation needed] As chairman of JALC from its inception in 1989 until 2001, Davis "was a driving force in [JALC] becoming an independent constituent of Lincoln Center Inc., in July 1996, equal to each of the other performing arts on the Lincoln Center campus and also in the conception and construction of [JALC's] home Frederick P. Rose Hall, the 'House of Swing'."[23][37]

Davis, who served as president of Lincoln Center in 2001,[32][38] was selected in 2016 as a Founding Member of the Performing Arts Hall of Fame at Lincoln Center.[6] He is a Life Trustee of the New York Public Library[7] and was appointed in 2010 by President Barack Obama to serve a six-year term as a trustee of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.[8]

Recognition

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Davis holds honorary degrees from Williams College (Doctor of Laws) and Bard College (Doctor of Humane Letters). He is a recipient of the Williams College Bicentennial Medal, the Central Park Conservancy Frederick Law Olmsted Medal, and the Medal of the City of New York for Exceptional Service. He has also been honored by the New York 100 Black Men, the Harlem School of the Arts (Founders Medal), the Dance Theater of Harlem, The Citizens Committee for New York (Chapin Award for the Arts), New Yorkers for Parks, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and the Prospect Park Alliance. He is also a recipient of Jazz at Lincoln Center's Ed Bradley Award for Leadership, and was designated in 2020 as a NYC Living Landmark.

Family

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Davis is married (1968) to Peggy Cooper Davis, a former New York State Family Court judge who is the John S. R. Shad Professor of Lawyering and Ethics at the New York University Law School.[39] The Davises have a daughter, Elizabeth Cooper Davis], a performing artist and educator.[citation needed]

Davis' brother, Allison Stubbs Davis (born August 31, 1939) lives in Chicago. He is a lawyer, real estate developer, and community planner.[40]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Gordon J. Davis". The HistoryMakers. Retrieved December 23, 2014.
  2. ^ a b Dyja, Thomas (2022). New York, New York, New York: Four Decades of Success, Excess, and Transformation. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781982149796.
  3. ^ a b Luo, Michael (August 27, 2008). "Top Black Donors See Obama's Rise as Their Own". The New York Times. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
  4. ^ "Leadership". Jazz at Lincoln Center. Retrieved May 2, 2017.
  5. ^ Aaron Bryant, "Business of Fine Arts," Black Enterprise, November 1, 2014.
  6. ^ a b "Lincoln Center to Create First-Ever Hall of Fame all of the Performing Arts," Lincoln Center Press Release, January 22, 2016
  7. ^ a b "Board of Trustees". New York Public Library. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
  8. ^ a b "President Obama has nominated Gordon J. Davis, Fred Eychaner, Charles B. Ortner and Penny Pritzker to serve on the Board of Trustees of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts". Hill. October 1, 2010.
  9. ^ A. Davis and J. Dollard, Children of Bondage: The Personality Development of Negro Youth in the Urban South, Washington, DC: American Council on Education, 1940.
  10. ^ A. Davis, B. Gardner, and M. Gardner, Deep South. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1941.
  11. ^ Wilkerson, Isabel (2020). Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-0593230251.
  12. ^ Waggoner, Walter H. (November 22, 1983). "ALLISON DAVIS, PSYCHOLOGIST, DIES; WROTE ABOUT BLACKS IN AMERICA". The New York Times. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
  13. ^ Varel, David (February 8, 2017). "Allison Davis: Forgotten black scholar studied – and faced – structural racism in 1940s America". The Conversation.com.
  14. ^ "Mission Statement". The Davis Center.
  15. ^ "Williams College Establishes Social and Racial Justice Fellowship in Honor of Gordon Davis". March 15, 2022.
  16. ^ Harvard Law School, September 16, 2016, Dean Martha Minow, Statement of Recognition
  17. ^ G. Davis and M. Schwartz, "Tenant Unions, an Experiment in Private Law Making." Harv. Civ. Lib.-Civ. Rights L. Rev. 2 (2) (1967), p. 237
  18. ^ G. Davis and A. Hawes, "Toward an Understanding of Decision Making in the Office of Economic Opportunity." Harv. Civ. Lib.-Civ. Rights L. Rev. 2 (2) (1967)
  19. ^ G. Davis, Report and Determination in the Matter of Christo: The Gates. New York: NYC Department of Parks, 1981
  20. ^ G. Davis, Introduction. In Ruth Orkin, More Pictures from My Window. New York: Rizzoli, 1983
  21. ^ G. Davis, "The Crisis" Correspondence of W. Allison Davis and W. E. B. DuBois, lecture, New York: Century Association, 2004
  22. ^ Davis, Gordon (November 24, 2015). "What Woodrow Wilson Cost My Grandfather". The New York Times.
  23. ^ a b Elisabeth Bumiller (August 21, 1998). "PUBLIC LIVES; Lincoln Center Homecoming for Jazz Lover". The New York Times. Retrieved December 23, 2014.
  24. ^ Herman, R. (August 19, 1979). "Parks Boss". The New York Times.
  25. ^ Coombs, O. (November 9, 1981). "The Prince of Central Park". New York Magazine.
  26. ^ Carmody, D. (January 30, 1983). "Grass Grew under Davis; That's Good". The New York Times.
  27. ^ "2020 Living Landmarks Celebration". December 12, 2019.
  28. ^ "Gordon Davis Named a Living Landmark by New York Landmarks Conservancy". YouTube. November 23, 2020.
  29. ^ Purdum, T. (November 15, 1989). "Dinkins Transition Team". The New York Times.
  30. ^ Williams, L. (December 11, 1987). "THE LAW; For Black Partners in Top Firms, Lunch Is Special". The New York Times.
  31. ^ Taylor, J. (April 18, 1988). "Blacks – Partners". New York Magazine.
  32. ^ a b Ralph Blumenthal (October 28, 2000). "Lincoln Center Chief Dusts Off Welcome Mat". The New York Times. Retrieved December 23, 2014.
  33. ^ Pogrebin, R. (March 20, 1995). "Best Lawyers in New York". New York.
  34. ^ "America's Top Black Lawyers". Black Enterprise. November 2003.
  35. ^ New York Bar Association, Statement of Goals For Increasing Minority Retention and Promotion, Committee to Enhance Professional Opportunities for Minorities in the Profession, September 1991
  36. ^ See 10/20/15 Central Park Conservancy Board Resolutions designating as its Founding Trustees Elizabeth Barlow Rogers, William Sperry Beinecke, Richard Gilder, and Gordon J. Davis
  37. ^ The Editors at Jazz at Lincoln Center (2012). In the Spirit of Swing: The First 25 Years of Jazz at Lincoln Center. Chronicle Books. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  38. ^ Bennetts, L. (February 4, 2002). "The Metropolitan Soap Opera". New York Magazine.
  39. ^ "Peggy Cooper Davis - Overview | NYU School of Law".
  40. ^ The Davis Group Archived March 3, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, "Allison S. Davis"