Born: 3 April 1938, United States
Died: 20 February 2012
Country most active: United States
Also known as: Katie Beatrice Green
The following is republished from the U.S. Congress. This piece falls under under public domain, as copyright does not apply to “any work of the U.S. Government” where “a work prepared by an officer or employee of the U.S. Government as part of that person’s official duties” (See, 17 U.S.C. §§ 101, 105).
In the 1950s, Katie Hall was inspired to seek out a “world larger than Mississippi” after hearing speeches by visiting African-American Members of Congress in her hometown of Mound Bayou. Hall moved to Gary, Indiana, in 1960 and was active in local and state politics before winning a 1982 special election to the U.S. House of Representatives. She was the first Black Member of Congress from Indiana, and in a little more than two years on Capitol Hill she successfully led the House effort to create a federal holiday honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Katie Hall was born Katie Beatrice Green on April 3, 1938, to Jeff and Bessie Mae Hooper Green, in Mound Bayou, Mississippi. One of 12 children, Hall attended the public schools in Mound Bayou and graduated with a bachelor’s degree from Mississippi Vocational College—now known as Mississippi Valley State University—a historically Black university, in 1960. In 1957, she married John H. Hall and they had two children: Jacqueline and Junifer.
When a local physician and civic leader invited Representative William L. Dawson of Illinois and other African-American Members of Congress to speak in Mound Bayou in the 1950s, Hall embraced the power of politics to effect change. “They started me to thinking what life should be like,” she recalled. The day after she graduated from college in 1960, Hall and her young family moved north to Gary, Indiana, an industrial city on the south shore of Lake Michigan, in pursuit of work and political freedom. Hall and her husband swiftly launched themselves into local politics and registered to vote. The Halls met attorney Richard G. Hatcher at a NAACP meeting in 1962. The next year, Katie Hall worked on Hatcher’s campaign for the Gary city council, and in 1967, Hall was part of the team that helped elect Hatcher one of the first Black mayors of a major American city. During this period, she taught high school social studies in Gary and pursued a master’s degree from Indiana University in Bloomington, graduating in 1968.
Hall’s work on the campaign trail led her to consider a career in politics. She ran unsuccessful campaigns for the Gary city council in 1970 and the Indiana state house of representatives in 1972 but won a seat in the state house in 1974. Two years later, Hall was elected to the state senate, where she served from 1976 until 1982. She also led the Lake County Democratic committee from 1978 to 1980 and chaired the 1980 Indiana Democratic convention. Hall dedicated her efforts in the state legislature to supporting development in and around Gary, securing funds for conventions, sports centers, and the Gary/Chicago International Airport. She also helped establish the position of deputy mayor for Gary in 1975.
In September 1982, Indiana Democratic Representative Adam Benjamin Jr. died of a heart attack. A week later Hall attended a public forum to discuss a possible successor and was surprised to hear her name mentioned. “I had always thought about running for Congress,” she admitted, but refrained because “I saw Adam as a very highly respected Congressman who did the job very well. I saw him as a person who was undefeatable.” Patricia Benjamin, the late Representative’s wife, also expressed interest in succeeding her husband.
Under Indiana law, the chair of the district’s Democratic committee selected the nominee to fill the vacancy for the remainder of the 97th Congress (1981–1983). The party chair at the time was Gary Mayor Richard Hatcher, who Hall considered a political mentor. Hatcher recalled Hall’s support for his own political career in the 1960s and selected her as the Democratic candidate for the district representing the northwest corner of the state, anchored by Gary, the steel-producing hub of the region. At the same time, the district committee nominated Hall—with Hatcher casting the deciding vote—for a full term in the 98th Congress (1983–1985) representing a new seat that had been drawn following the 1980 Census. The district’s boundaries remained relatively unchanged after the reapportionment, and White northern Indiana Democrats protested Hall’s nomination to the safe Democratic seat because she was Black. Although downtown Gary was primarily African American, the population of the entire district was 70 percent White. A legal battle ensued when Patricia Benjamin’s supporters claimed that Hatcher, as chairman of the old district, did not have the right to select a candidate for the new district. The courts refused to overturn Hatcher’s decision. Hall’s nomination for both the vacancy and the full term was tantamount to election in the working-class, Democratic district. She defeated her Republican opponent, Thomas Krieger, with 63 percent of the vote to win election to the remainder of the 97th Congress. She simultaneously won election with 56 percent of the vote for the 98th Congress. Hall was the first Black woman from Indiana to serve in the U.S. Congress.
When she arrived in Washington to be sworn in on November 2, 1982, Representative Hall received seats on the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service and the Committee on Public Works and Transportation. Hall voted with the Democratic majority against much of the Ronald Reagan administration’s legislative agenda, focusing on education, labor, and women’s issues. Hall said many of her constituents believed the President had failed on women’s issues “and I have to agree,” she insisted, pointing to the lack of enforcement of equal opportunity laws in education and employment. She voted against the Social Security Amendments of 1983 which raised the retirement age and delayed cost-of-living adjustments. “I thought it would put an undue hardship on many of my constituents,” she argued.
Hall’s northwest Indiana congressional district led the nation in steel production at the time. As a member of the House Steel Caucus, Hall cosponsored the Fair Trade in Steel Act, designed to revitalize American steel production in cities like Gary by limiting steel imports. Hall urged the Reagan administration to implement protectionist measures. As part of the executive committee of the Steel Caucus, Hall met with President Reagan in 1983 to discuss the administration’s new task force established to revitalize the industry without instituting tariffs. Hall also worked to improve conditions overseas and during a congressional fact-finding tour of six North African countries, Hall joined her colleagues in the fight to alleviate hunger in Ethiopia.
Hall made her most lasting legislative contribution as chair of the Post Office and Civil Service Subcommittee on Census and Population, which held jurisdiction over federal holidays. In July 1983, Hall introduced a bill to make the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. a public holiday. Since King’s assassination in 1968, similar measures had been introduced annually, but all had failed. Although Detroit Representative John Conyers Jr. had regularly sponsored the measure, the Congressional Black Caucus selected Hall as the floor manager for the measure. Representative William H. Gray III of Pennsylvania observed, “Sometimes when you get to the goal line it’s good to go to someone fresh and new to take it over. She brought a freshness of approach, a spirit of reconciliation to what had sometimes been a bitter battle.” Hall held hearings on the measure, welcoming testimony from Senator Edward Moore “Ted” Kennedy of Massachusetts, Stevie Wonder, and King’s widow Coretta Scott King.
Many opponents argued the bill would be too expensive, citing the estimated cost of the holiday to the federal government, while others disparaged King’s character as unworthy of celebration. Hall negotiated with opponents by moving the holiday from a fixed date—King’s January 15 birthday—to the third Monday in January to prevent government offices from having to open twice in one week and thereby save money. She introduced a new bill on July 29, 1983, which was referred to the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service and swiftly sent to the House Floor under suspension of the rules. Hall opened debate in the chamber by reminding her colleagues, “The legislation before us will act as a national commitment to Dr. King’s vision and determination for an ideal America, which he spoke of the night before his death, where equality will always prevail.”
On the House Floor, most opponents continued to object to the bill’s cost, but some such as Representative Lawrence Patton McDonald of Georgia, alleged King was a Communist sympathizer and cited King’s sealed FBI surveillance records to impugn his character. Others wanted to remove King’s name from the title of the bill and complained that they were shut out of the amendment process. After one day of contentious debate on August 2, 1983—more than 15 years after King’s assassination—the bill passed the House by a vote of 338 to 90.
In the Senate, the measure faced an uphill climb as North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms threatened to filibuster. He criticized what he said was the burdensome cost of a new holiday for the federal government and also stated without evidence that King was connected to the Communist Party and should not be honored for his “calculated use of nonviolence as a provocative act.” Leadership in both parties criticized Helms and quickly offered Helms a vote on tobacco legislation crucial to North Carolina to end the standoff. On November 2, 1983, President Ronald Reagan abandoned his opposition to the measure and signed it into law. Hall also sponsored a bill creating a federal commission to encourage commemorative events on the first observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, which was scheduled for January 20, 1986. It was signed into law in 1984.
In 1984, Hall encountered formidable competition in her bid for renomination and re-election to the 99th Congress (1985–1987). Despite support from prominent Democrats, including Speaker Thomas P. “Tip” O’Neill Jr. of Massachusetts, Hall faced two strong challengers in her district primary: former Adam Benjamin aide Peter Visclosky and county prosecutor Jack Crawford. Hall maintained that her opposition was based partially on her race and gender. During one debate, Hall declared, “If I wasn’t black and female, there wouldn’t be a contest.” Rev. Jesse Jackson, whose name appeared on the primary ballot for the Democratic presidential nominee, also rallied to her aid. In the May primary, Hall lost the Democratic nomination to Visclosky by a margin of 2,367 votes. Low turnout among Gary residents significantly reduced Hall’s vote tally when compared with her victorious 1982 campaign, despite Jackson’s presence on the ballot. Hall argued that racism had led to her defeat, pointing to Visclosky’s accusations that she ignored non-Black constituents, particularly in the suburbs, in favor of serving the interests of Mayor Hatcher in Gary. Hall also questioned the returns in areas where her campaign predicted a stronger showing than reflected in the final count. She filed suit to force a recount of the primary results. In one suburban county, a recount confirmed her losing margin without changing a single vote.
After Congress, Hall continued to be active in Indiana Democratic politics. In 1986 and in 1990, she tried unsuccessfully to recapture the Democratic nomination in her old House district. Hall returned to Gary and began teaching again while also serving as the vice chair of the city’s housing board. Hall became the Gary city clerk in 1988. She resigned in January 2003 after pleading guilty to charges of federal mail fraud. On February 20, 2012, Katie Hall died at the age of 73, in Gary, Indiana.