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Maynard
H. Jackson, Jr.,
Chairman Emeritus and Founding Principal
Daniel
Halpern
Brooke
Jackson Edmond
Brenda
Branch
Garry
T. Taylor
Maurice
Evans, Jr.
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Maynard
H. Jackson returned to the private sector as Chairman of Jackson
Securities, LLC and Jackmont Hospitality, Inc.,
in January 1994, after completing his third award-winning term as
Mayor of Atlanta. Whether serving the public or working in a corporate
setting, Jackson had a successful record of asking the right questions,
focusing on the bottom line and delivering measurable results. Against
all odds and a consensus among officials that it could not be built,
Jackson’s building of the new Atlanta International Airport
(opened 20 September 1980) was a primary example of his “positive
leadership” style. It was the largest airport terminal in the
world when built and today is the world’s busiest.
Jackson
served as Mayor of Atlanta from 1974 to 1982 and again from 1990
to 1994.
His three terms as Mayor of Atlanta were distinguished
by the first international air carriers and a dramatic increase in
their number, consulates and foreign trade offices, imports and exports,
the neighborhood planning unit system, a comprehensive development
plan, major construction, management innovation, the arts, mass transit,
vertically integrated housing finance and production, streamlining
the bureaucracy, increasing employee incentives and productivity,
record-setting new jobs creation, strong bond ratings, and the most
successful non-preference, non-quota affirmative action and equal
opportunity programs in the nation. Especially noteworthy was Jackson’s
leadership in the construction of Hartsfield Atlanta International
Airport, which was completed ahead of schedule and under budget. The
Atlanta Airport is the biggest economic generator in the Southeastern
United States. As a result, Jackson’s years of Mayoral service
were widely respected and documented as times of unparalleled economic
development, internationalism, public-private partnerships, racial
harmony, and fiscal stability for Atlanta. FORTUNE magazine’s
survey of CEO’s named Atlanta as the “Best American City” in
which to do business in 1991 and 1993.
Under his leadership, Jackson Securities Inc., a national institutional
and retail investment bank, headquartered in Atlanta, has expanded
steadily and now has offices in Houston, Miami, Orlando, San Francisco,
Philadelphia, New York and Stamford, CT. Jackson Securities has earned
a reputation for unquestionable integrity, superior quality, prudence
and outstanding performance in corporate finance, public finance,
wealth management, private equity, structured finance, and institutional
equities and fixed-income trading.
Jackson was National Development Chairman of the Democratic National
Committee and was the first Chairman of the DNC Voting Rights Institute.
He was a member of the DNC Executive Committee.
Determined to counteract voter disillusionment and apathy, Jackson
founded in 2002 the American Voters League, Inc., a non-profit, non-partisan
effort to increase national voter turnout of base vote Americans,
especially African Americans.
Jackson, was a member of the Bars of Georgia and New York, was a
Managing Partner of Chapman and Cutler, Attorneys at Law, from 1982
to 1990, where he specialized in Public Finance law. In 1985, he co-organized
and became the Founding Chairman of the National Association of Securities
Professionals (NASP). Jackson was a NASD registered Municipal Securities
Principal (Series 53) and Uniform Securities Agent (Series 63).
Jackson’s winning style was at the heart of Atlanta’s
successful bid to host the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games, a bid
in which he played a key leadership role as Mayor. In recognition
thereof, H.E. Juan Antonio Samaranch, President of the International
Olympic Committee, officially commended him and the U.S. Olympic
Committee named Jackson Attaché for the United States of
America in the 1996 Centennial Olympics.
Many
of Jackson’s accomplishments were the result of a series
of creative and successful public-private-partnerships. That also
was his style when he was Chairman of the Advisory Board and President-elect
of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, Chairman of President Carter’s
Local Government Energy Policy Advisory Committee, Vice Chairman of
the White House Commission on the Windfall Profits Tax, and Chairman
of the Rebuild America Coalition (infrastructure investment), and
a member of the Rockefeller-led American Arts and Education. He was
founding Chairman of the Corporation for Olympic Development in Atlanta
(CODA), the U.S. Conference of Mayors Committee on the Arts, the U.S.
Conference of Mayors Special Committee on the Census Undercount, the
Atlanta Downtown Development Authority, the Urban Residential Finance
Authority of the City of Atlanta (URFA), the Atlanta Economic Development
Corporation, the High Noon Legal Foundation and co-founder of the
Urban Residential Development Corporation of the City of Atlanta.
In
1974, the American Institute for Public Service awarded former Mayor
Maynard
Jackson
the prestigious Jefferson Award for “The
Greatest Public Service Performed by an American 35 Years or Under.”
In
May of 1999, Georgia Governor Roy E. Barnes named Maynard Jackson
to
the Board
of the Georgia Department of Industry, Trade and Tourism,
where he served a term as Chairman of the International Trade Committee
and as a member of the Executive Committee. He was an active member
of the Metropolitan Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, Honorary Chair and
Board Member of the Leadership Center at Morehouse College, a 33° Prince
Hall Free and Accepted Mason, a member of Friendship Baptist Church,
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, and numerous civic and social organizations.
In 1990, Jackson founded the Maynard Jackson Youth Foundation, Inc.
(a multi-focused leadership program teaching disadvantaged 11th grade
students in Atlanta) where he actively served as Chairman and Principal
Teacher.
Jackson
was a 23-year Trustee of Morehouse College and a former board member
of the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, The Atlanta Regional Commission,
the Environmental Financial Advisory Board of the U.S. Department
of Energy, the Emory Community Legal Services Program, the C.A.R.E.
Board of Overseers, FGIC Public Trust and the National Council of
the United Nations Association-USA, and was a national Board member
of the NAACP. He was a corporate board member of Fannie Mae, ICF Kaiser
International, govWorks.com, Bingwa Software, and Real Estate.com,
Inc. Jackson also was Chairman of Jackmont Hospitality, Inc., a foodservice
and restaurant company.
Maynard
Jackson, a member of Phi Beta Kappa and recipient of eight honorary
degrees,
was a former Visitor of the Kennedy School of Government
at Harvard University and Chubb Fellow at Yale University. He earned
the BA in Political Science and History from Morehouse College at
age 18 and the Juris Doctor cum laude from the School of Law at North
Carolina Central University. Jackson was born in Dallas, raised in
Atlanta; and worked his way through school as a waiter, tobacco picker,
librarian and encyclopedia national sales trainer and salesman. He
was married to Valerie J.R. Jackson, (MBA, Wharton), host of WABE-FM’s “Between
the Lines,” (www.wabe.org) and was the father of four daughters
and one son. Maynard H. Jackson died unexpectedly on June 23, 2003.
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