READIN’ ROLDO: POINT OF VIEW FOR JUL/AUG ’70…
0000 by Jeff Hess
At the bottom of yesterday’s Readin’ Roldo I noted that Davis commanded the famous Tuskegee Airmen of the U.S. Army Air Corps. This morning I discovered that Roldo Bartimole devoted most of Volume 3, Nos. 1 & 2 to Davis in his short tour of duty—21 January-27 July 1970—as the Public Safety Director of Cleveland. I wanted to know more about the man.
Here is what Britannica has to say:
Benjamin O. Davis, Jr., in full Benjamin Oliver Davis, Jr., (born December 18, 1912, Washington, D.C., U.S.—died July 4, 2002, Washington, D.C.), pilot, officer, and administrator who became the first African American general in the U.S. Air Force. His father, Benjamin O. Davis, Sr., was the first African American to become a general in any branch of the U.S. military.
Davis studied at the University of Chicago before entering the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, in 1932. After graduating in 1936 he was commissioned in the infantry and in 1941 was among the first group of African Americans admitted to the Army Air Corps and to pilot training. Upon his graduation he was swiftly promoted to lieutenant colonel, and he organized the 99th Pursuit Squadron, the first entirely African American air unit, which flew tactical support missions in the Mediterranean theatre. In 1943 he organized and commanded the 332nd Fighter Group (the Tuskegee Airmen). By the end of the war Davis himself had flown 60 combat missions and had been promoted to colonel.
After the war Davis held other commands, and he helped plan the desegregation of the air force in 1948. He graduated from the Air War College in 1950, commanded a fighter wing in the Korean War, and was promoted to brigadier general (a one-star general) in 1954. In 1959 Davis became the first African American officer to reach the rank of major general (a two-star general) in the air force and was promoted to lieutenant general (a three-star general) in 1965. After retiring in 1970 he was named director of civil aviation security in the U.S. Department of Transportation. In that post he devised and coordinated measures that effectively ended a wave of aircraft hijackings in the United States. Davis became an assistant secretary of transportation in 1971.
His six months in Cleveland are missing from the official record. They never happened. Additionally, director Anthony Hemingway makes no mention of the famous flier in his 2012 movie about the Tuskegee airmen: Red Tails. Instead, Hemingway gave command of the squadron to a fictious Col. A.J. Bullard, played by Terrence Howard. Bullard was named in honor of Eugene Jacques Bullard the first Black combat pilot who flew in The Great War.
I’ve ordered a copy of Davis’ autobiography to read what he had to say about his stay here in Cleveland, but suffice to say that for a man whose life was so distinguished, his time in Cleveland really sucked.
In his 20 July 1970 issue of Point Of Viəw (volume 3, number 1), Roldo, under the headline, HATE CLIMATE BUILDS; RACISM UNCHALLENGED, ledes:
While Gen. Ben Davis was “learning” how to solve the problem of student unrest in Washington, D.C. last week, his policies and police force were ensuring Cleveland would have a most unrestful summer.
The former Air Force general, being boomed in the press here as alternately for mayor of Cleveland and D.C., has bridged the gap between the police and the Stokes administration.
He joined the cops.
With white politicians peddling racism wholesale cheap (see yesterday’s Readin’ Roldo) the General has been supporting attacks on blacks and allowing his police to afford the same privileges to white hoods.
Reading the next sentence, written sometime in early July, I had to wonder what Roldo was hearing on the back channels. He continues:
But the General may have trouble getting through the summer with his image intact. Black endurance, even in Cleveland, may not be that strong.
The latest test of that endurance involves attacks on Blacks and “nigger loving” whites in the Tremont area.
…
If nothing else, the attacks united a variety of usually quarreling community groups. Citizens went to City Hall to see the General who was in D.C.Instead, the group met the General’s Colonel, William Hendrickson.
Hendrickson scoffed when told the protestors were coming, identifying one as a pesky crank. About an hour before, this same woman, overcome by fear and fatigue, collapsed at a public meeting. She and her children had been sleeping on the floor to avoid being shot.
…
With Hendrickson was Dennis Kucinich, Tremont councilman who is always alert and willing to exploit a situation. However, looking meek and concerned in front of reporters and TV cameras, Dennis has been strangely silent during this tense period and has spurned invitations to meet with constituents until they came to City Hall. Dennis said he had toured the tense area but residents curiously had never seen him.
What follows is a portrait of a Kucinich I did not know. I came to Cleveland in 1984 and by that time Kucinich was out of the mayor’s office and between political gigs. Roldo, however, has never let go writing as recently as last August, in KUCINICH—BORN TO RUN, NOT NECESSARILY TO WIN about rumors of Kucinich making a mayoral comeback. Roldo wrote then:
Now, a few months short of 74 years old, Dennis is running again. Or so he isn’t saying anything to refute talk of his interest in the mayoral race of 2021.
He was born to run.
The big question is, however, does he have any chance of winning and of operating a government. A government he had much trouble with in the late 1970s.
He was a one-term, two-year mayor. He squeezed into those two years, among other problems, a voter recall, a financial default, a tax hike vote and a vote on Muny Light. There were no slow days.
He was not re-elected. However, he did become a U.S. Congressman from 1997-2013. He also served in the Ohio Senate in 1995.
Now it is time to look back at his City Hall days.
Returning to July 1970, and the city hall office of William Hendrickson, Roldo continues:
Kucinich’s silence might well be taken as tacit approval by neighborhood troublemakers. He has said that his concern in Ward 7 was with the “stable white community,” not blacks and white Appalachians.
…
The Tremont harassment follows too closely the bitter battle against public housing in Cleveland being led by reactionary white politicians (Kucinich, Richard Harmody and Jim Stanton) who see local benefits in a [George] Wallace-[Spiro] Agnew approach. Most of the threats in Tremont demand removal of Blacks from public housing.Kucinich, who has been carefully building a city-wide reputation as a youthful anti-black politician, blames, as might be expected, left-wing radicals for the Tremont troubles. At the meeting he hid behind Gen. Davis, obsequiously applauding the Safety Director and placing full confidence in him.
…
The General has become the media darling. The Cleveland Press said last week that Davis “has impressed all segments of the community as a tough, fair-minded administrator.” There’s no criticism of the General’s travels or his Tuesday and Thursday working-hours golf dates.The Press went on to say, “One rarely hears about disaffection between the mayor’s office and the Police Dept. since Davis has been on the job.”
That’s easily explained. The police, through Davis, now get everything they want. Why would the police complain as they now have the freedom to attack blacks at will and allow white citizens the same privilege?
It’s been carefully noted, too, that Davis fired former Asst. Safety Director Frank Moss, a black, for filing an incorrect report. Moss had a month to go for 25 years’ service. Meanwhile, a white police officer, charged with shooting his wife and then himself, remains on the street, no less the force.
Throughout this period, blacks have shown more patience than this community deserves.
In order to provide more context for Davis’ time in office, Roldo appended information under the head, BACKGROUND. He wrote:
The trouble in Tremont started 18 June when a party was held for an African student and some whites broke it up.
From that time on there has been a steadily growing harassment, including gunfire at buildings housing blacks and whites who have associated with them. Grocery stores have been threatened about serving blacks; several have been fired upon. Windows of an agency serving both white and black youth have been broken and the landlord of another agency was beaten. The apartment of a man who took petitions out for a recall of the area’s councilman, Dennis Kucinich, was set afire and a black woman was called and told of the fire in her “friend’s,” before the fire engines arrived. Children “go to pieces” from threats and obscenities by telephone. (At a meeting discussing the problems in a church basement a tap on the window was heard. Almost immediately one of the black women slumped to the floor out of fear.
On the evening of 13 July, the women were harassed by armed youths. The police were called but didn’t arrive for an hour. They were cussed for being late by a black man, Juba Chilembiwe, who was roughed up at the scene and arrested. The next day Juba was dead. The police said he hung himself in his cell with his belt.
No one believes the story.
Roldo continues:
The police story differed from those present during the incident. Juba swore at the police, asked them why they had been late. A reporter was told by the police that a black man had been raving about racism on the West Side and that they picked him up for drunkenness. Then he hung himself.
The women also swear that he wore no belt. It is normal police procedure to take belts from prisoners.
Two days after the death, the body was cremated, ensuring no reliable autopsy. The word of the police and the County Coroner’s office are unreliable.
Dennis Kucinich blames left-wing radicals for the trouble in his ward.
That is a very different Kucinich from the man who hung out in California with Shirley MacClaine and moved distinctly to the left.
Finally, a note on war supplies. In yesterday’s installment I noted that Davis ordered some 30,000 rounds of hollow-point ammunition. Mayor Stokes was not happy. Roldo, briefly, writes:
GENERAL THWARTED—The order for 30,000 hollow-point bullets, commonly known as dum-dums, by Gen. Davis, has been reversed by Mayor Stokes. Stokes stopped the order and told aides if the Safety Director would like to complain he should see the mayor.
But as we’ll see in the next issue, Davis gets the last word.
In his 1 August 1970 issue of Point Of Viəw (volume 3, number 2), Roldo goes right for the jugular with the headline, THE DAVIS DEBACLE. He ledes:
“I wish I had a machine gun now. I’d shoot them all down.”
Those are the private words attributed to Gen. Benjamin O. Davis Jr. by an admiring councilman. They were aimed at black militants who refused to stand for a pledge to the flag at a city council meeting.
“There are fundamental causes—poverty, living conditions. Until they are removed, or their effects decreased, I don’t think anybody is going to come up with very dramatic and immediate changes.”
Those are the words of a humbler Gen. Davis to a Detroit reporter before he came to Cleveland as Safety Director.
Davis said recently that he was trying to: “constructively instill in the police dept. a grave concern for the rights of all the city’s citizens and innate courtesy for all.” But when police without warrants took recorders, cameras and files from Panthers, Davis saw nothing to investigate. And he told officers privately not to call blacks “niggers,” but to use “son of a bitch.”
The general got confused with what he was supposed to say as a public official and what he really felt. In the end, 37 years of military emerged unconditionally as victor.
He quit with a blast that Mayor Stokes not only did not support him but gave “support and comfort to the enemies of law enforcement.” The charge, unexplained and without the General’s naming the “enemies shook the administration to its toes.” More on that later.
Cleveland had descended into the “Good Negro, Bad Negro debate. Roldo continued:
Where white liberals found the suave, cool Carl Stokes an acceptable Negro, the General earned the same acceptability from a far larger segment of whites, those who don’t know and fear blacks. The psychological relief from the burden of having to think of oneself as a bigot with the added dividend of allegiance to an authority figure could be a potent political combination nationally.
But as good a mayoral candidate as Davis looked last Tuesday, by Wednesday the chinks in his armor were visible and by week’s end there were embarrassing holes.
Davis began getting tacit support from parts of the media and the Democratic and Republican parties looking for a candidate next year. By the end of the week he had the damaging endorsement of the American Independent Party of George Wallace. Even the Cleveland Patrolman’s Association offered him a post. The offer was made by James Magas, association head, who the week before called for “on the street justice,” the new euphemism for murder when the accused murderer of a policeman is arrested.
Back in the late ’80s I knew a Marine Corps colonel who would have approved of Magas’ position. (I do have to chuckle at the completely unrelated spelling of the his name to our twice impeached soon-to-be-ex-president’s slogan.) The colonel once told me that if he had his druthers, he would line rioters up on the sidewalk and summarily executive them. Roldo continues:
But why did Davis quit so suddenly and in a huff?
Davis probably learned of attacks upon him prepared at City Hall with the knowledge of the Mayor. A report documenting requests for protection of blacks and white in Tremont and, to use a favorite word of the General’s, the “negative” response by Davis, was being prepared. It would have severely criticized Davis.
Further, a cross-fire of criticism from the West and East sides, black and white, was in the making.
…
Because of Davis’ lack of concern about attacks on black in Tremont, clergymen had to be recruited through the Council of Churches to patrol the area. The City Community Relations division also took an active role.Thus it was amusing, but not surprising, that among Gen. Davis’ “enemies of law enforcement” were Rev. Arthur LeMon, head of the Community Relations unit, and the Council of Churches (actually, Davis means the Council’s Metropolitan Affairs Commission, a black buffer unit that allows elite-level clergymen to avoid all the tough issues).
Davis’ charges had the old “soft on communism” tone to it. Like old Joe McCarthy waving his list, Davis refused to name the “enemies.” Stokes eventually released the list made up of names given to him, he said, by Davis.
Was that enough for Britannica to ignore Davis’ six months in Cleveland? Perhaps.
In his THRU THE GRINDER section, Roldo touches on three items:
SECOND TO LAST ACT?—Before quitting, Gen. Davis ordered 30 pump action shotguns and 275 Smith & Wesson 38 heavy barrel revolvers for his troops.
And:
CHOP-CHOP—Plain Dealer editors chopped two important facts out of a recent story on a robbery of 300 TV sets. First, one of the five men charged with the theft was a fireman and so noted the original copy of the reporter. Second, the lawyer for three of the five was Hugh Corrigan. This was penciled out of the story. County Commissioner Corrigan rarely handles any court cases. It will be interesting to watch what charges are finally made by County Prosecutor John T. Corrigan. The Corrigans are cousins.
Further Jim Stanton, close friend of both, got avid support, including financial, from the firemen in his Congressional primary victory.
And:
DIRTY DOW—The beauty of being a major polluter of the Great Lakes for Dow Chemical is that it reaps profits from its destruction. Having dumped mercury into the lakes for years, Dow is now collecting some $550,000 this year to clean up the lake.
The city of Cleveland has authorized $250,000 this year added to some $300,000 for Dow.
This last reminds me of the chutzpah of the Sackler family marketing a drug to treat the addicts hooked by their own devious marketing of OxyContin.
As a final note, this post covers two month because Roldo decided to give himself some breathing room for the summer, omitting the first issues from July and August. He returned to bi-weekly publication in September, where we’ll go tomorrow.
See here for a bibliography of books and other materials mentioned in this series.






