Dr. Leslie W. Dunbar passed away peacefully in New Orleans on January 4, 2017, three weeks shy of his 96th birthday. Dr. Dunbar was the youngest of ten siblings – and a native of Greenbrier County, West Virginia. His family was an early victim of the Great Depression and left the Greenbrier Valley for Baltimore, where he met his future wife, Peggy Rawls. He attended the University of Maryland until World War II began when he left the University to supervise the assembly of B-26 bombers at the Glenn L. Martin aircraft plant. His clandestine (so they thought) marriage to Peggy, a nursing student, was reported in a Baltimore paper and caused her expulsion according to the rules of her school. After the war, and without a college degree, he was admitted to Cornell University where with a young baby he earned a Ph.D. in political philosophy and Constitutional law. He went on to teach political science at Emory University. In 1951 he moved to the Atomic Energy Commission as Chief of Community Affairs - overseeing the sudden arrival of workers and scientists in Aiken, South Carolina, as the AEC's immense Savannah River Plant was brought online. He returned to academia to teach at Mount Holyoke in Massachusetts, where he chaired the political science department. But, in 1958, he answered his true calling, motivated by what he called "Southern-born common sense," and retuned to Atlanta to join the staff of the Southern Regional Council. "It was a time of mind-changing in the South," he said, "and SRC was central to that." He was with the Atlanta-based Southern Regional Council during the tumultuous days of the civil rights movement, as its director of research (1958 to 1960) and its Executive Director (1961 to 1965). He was a passionate voice for acknowledging and following the black leadership of the southern struggle. With Southern Leadership Christian Conference's Martin Luther King Jr. and the NAACP's Roy Wilkins, he helped to create the Voter Education Project; using the funds of the SRC to sponsor it. He hired Wiley A. Branton and later, Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., to direct the Project which is credited with registering two million African American voters in the 1960's. Dr. Dunbar was a guest at the signing of the Voting Rights Act at the White House in 1965. Also in 1965, Dr. Dunbar moved with his family to New York to direct the Field Foundation, a philanthropy founded by the Chicago department store family and dedicated to child welfare and civil rights. In that role, and until 1980, he championed (and funded) many causes critical to the enduring Civil Rights struggle. These included major financial support to maintain the existence of the Friends of the Children Head Start program in Mississippi in the face of state efforts to eradicate the program. He steered Field Foundation funds to provide substantial, probably primary, support for Martin Luther King's Poor People's Campaign, which continued through organizational difficulties after Dr. King's assassination. He was instrumental in providing financial sustenance to the fledgling Children's Defense Fund under the direction of Marian Wright Edelman, and he was an early supporter of Cesar Chavez's United Farm Workers' Association, and of La Raza, a leading Latino advocacy organization. At the time of his passing, Ms. Edelman said, "He has made such a difference in my life and so many others. I still gain strength thinking about his creative philanthropy and persevering friendship and support. There would unlikely be a Children's Defense Fund without his investing in the seeds of the Washington Research Project that sprung from the Poor People's Campaign and evolved into CDF. He enabled all of these. His risk taking and creative and long term investment philanthropy is unmatched today. So many of the anti-hunger and anti-poverty fighters today are his children." Dr. Dunbar was an early and passionate objector to the War in Vietnam – leading to his being escorted by the Capitol police, in a dignified way, from a sit-in at the House of Representatives protesting funding for the War. He was a "scholar-at-large" with the United Negro College Fund in 1984-1985, and taught at Xavier University in New Orleans. His working career concluded at the Ford Foundation, where he published, Minority Rights, What Has Happened to Blacks, Hispanics, American Indians & Other Minorities in the Eighties. This was one of several books he wrote, one of the last being Looking for the Future, A Meditation on Political Choice, a commentary on American militarism and democracy published in 2012 when he was 91. "Retiring" to Durham, North Carolina, and well into his seventies, Leslie became a volunteer in the "guardian ad litem," or CASA, program and narrowly lost a campaign for election to the Durham School Board. He became active in the social justice ministry of the Watts Street Baptist Church, and in 1992, along with its pastor Rev. Mel Williams, founded the Religious Coalition for a Nonviolent Durham. Throughout his adult life he maintained a commitment to dozens of grassroots civil rights, labor, and political groups. Dr. Dunbar's wife, Peggy Rawls Dunbar of Baltimore, Maryland, his daughter Linda Kravitz Knox, and foster son Van Nha, predeceased him. So did his brothers and sisters. He is survived in New Orleans by his son, Tony Dunbar with partner Nancy J. Shoemaker, and by his grandson Samuel Rawls Price Dunbar; by his granddaughter Rachel Kravitz of Bethesda, Maryland; his son-in-law Hugh Knox; and his "adopted" Knox grandchildren Kate and Tim and Rebecca and her husband George Rice. JACOB SCHOEN & SON in charge of arrangements. To sign and view the Family Guestbook, please visit
www.schoenfh.com.Published by The New Orleans Advocate from Jan. 6 to Jan. 8, 2017.