BIOGRAPHY OF JESSE N.
ALEXANDER
Jesse Nelson Alexander, Jr. was born 19 August 1928 in Somerset,
Kentucky, the son of Reella (Lackey) Alexander (1901-1977) and Jesse Wilson
Alexander (1894-1984). Alexander grew up was educated in Louisville, Kentucky,
where he graduated from Central High School in 1945 at the age of 16 years. In
1950 he earned his Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics from Louisville
Municipal College, the racially segregated college of the University of
Louisville for African Americans. He went on to graduate from the Engineer
Officer Candidate School of the U.S. Army at Fort Belvoir, Virginia and
subsequently served as second in command of the 73rd Engineer Combat Company
during the Korean War. In 1956, with the help of the G.I. Bill, Alexander
enrolled at George Williams College in Chicago and in 1958 earned a master of
Science degree in group work administration. Post graduate studies included
work in the Department of Human Relations at New York University in 1962, and
at the Institute for Mediation and Conflict Resolution in New York City in
1972.
Alexander's involvement with the YMCA dates from 1946, when he was
recruited as a youth leader for the Chestnut Street YMCA in Louisville. His
YMCA career took him from Louisville to Chicago; Brooklyn, New York; and
Washington, D.C. where he served in various roles including youth leader, young
adult and adult leader, personnel officer, conference planner, trainer,
consultant, and an executive at local and national YMCA headquarters. He was
director of the YMCA National Youth Governors Conferences in Washington D.C.,
and a delegate to the 6th World Council of YMCAs in Kampala, Uganda in 1973.
After retiring from the YMCA's national board in 1981, Alexander joined the
national staff of the United Church of Christ in New York City, but continued
to be involved in the YMCA as a volunteer.
Much of Alexander's work in the YMCA focused on the area of race
relations within the movement. In 1968, Alexander helped organize the National
Conference of Black and Non-white YMCA Volunteers and Staff (BAN-WYS), a group
dedicated to supporting all efforts to overcome racism in the YMCA and to
assuring that YMCA units continued to exist in non-white communities, and
served as its executive director and advisor. He joined the staff of the
national board in 1969, when he was appointed Associate Executive Director for
Black and Non-White Concerns. His role in this position was to act as a kind of
ombudsman to address concerns identified by BAN-WYS, as well as to provide
leadership to YMCAs serving minority communities, and mediation in interracial
and intraracial conflicts. In 1973, he became director of the Board's Human
Rights Unit and the National YMCA's Affirmative Action Officer. He organized
and directed the 1978 international observances of the 125th anniversary of the
founding of the first YMCA in an African American community. As part of these
observances he wrote and produced a 22-minute YMCA film, "Extending the Spirit,
Helping Children Walk Tall;" and authored a book, "Selected Black Leaders of
the YMCA," which was published by the Association for the Study of
Afro-American Life and History. Alexander was also active in promoting the
YMCA's Black Achievers in Industry program, helping to spread the program from
the Harlem YMCA in New York City to scores of cities across the country,
including an extremely successful program in his hometown of Louisville. In
1996, he was inducted into the National Black Achievers Hall of Fame by the
YMCA of the USA.
Jesse Alexander married Maude Anna White (b. 1929) on 19 August 1956
in Louisville. The couple had four children, two daughters and two sons, and
settled in Montclair, New Jersey, where they lived until Alexander's retirement
in 1988.