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Senior Minister
Rev William H. Gray II
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William H. Gray, III Bio:
William H. Gray, III is the retired president and chief executive
officer of The College Fund/UNCF. He served in that capacity from
September 11. ]991 to June 1,2004.
As
head of America's oldest and most successful minority higher education
assistance organization, Mr. Gray led the United Negro College FW1d to
new fundraising records, while cutting costs and expanding programs and
services.
During Mr. Gray's 12 112-year tenure, he raised $2.3 of the $3 billion
raised by UNCF in its 60-year history.
Among
the historic initiatives laW1ched W1der Mr. Gray's leadership arc: the
development of the Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute to compile
and analyze data on a host of issues affecting African American students
from kindergarten through graduate school; the successful completion of
a $280 million capital campaign; the successful completion of an $80
million Technology Enhancement Capital Campaign (TECC) to bolster the
technology infrastructures of UNCF's member colleges and universities.
Prior
to his selection as president of UNCF, Mr. Gray served in the U.S.
Congress and was a staW1ch supporter of education. As the first African
American to chair the House Budget Committee, Mr. Gray was a leading
advocate for strengthening America's educational systems. As chairman of
the Democratic Caucus and later as Majority Whip, Mr. Gray was the
highest ranking African American ever to serve in Congress.
Elected to the House of Representatives in 1978, Mr. Gray left his mark
on Congress in many other areas. He played a key role in implementing
economic sanctions against South Africa as the author of the 1985 and
1986 sanction bills. As Budget Committee Chairman for four years, Mr.
Gray earned a reputation as a Consensus builder and was chief point man
in budget negotiations between Congress and the Reagan Administration.
Mr.
Gray has also served as special advisor to the President on Haiti in May
1994. In that role, which concluded in September 1994, Mr. Gray assisted
the President in developing and carrying out policy to restore democracy
to Haiti. In1995, Mr. Gray received the Medal of Honor from Haitian
President Jean Bertrand Aristide.
The
heir to a legacy of education leaders, his father, the late Dr. William
H Gray, Jr. served as president of two black colleges, Florida A&M
University and Florida Memorial College. His mother was a dean of a
Black college and his grandfather was a professor at a Black college, as
was his sister.
Mr.
Gray's own background in education is extensive. He has been a faculty
member and professor of history and religion at St. Peter's College,
Jersey City State College, Montclair State College, Eastern Baptist
Theological Seminary, and Temple University.
Hailing from a family of ministers as well as educators, Mr. Gray has
been pastor of the nearly 7,000-member Bright Hope Baptist Church in
Philadelphia for more than 25 years, as were his father and grandfather
before him. He has been in the ministry since ]964, when he became
pastor of Union Baptist Church of Montclair, New Jersey.
Mr.
Gray attended Franklin and Marshall College, where he earned a B.A. in
History. He received a master's degree in Divinity from Drew Theological
Seminary, and a master's degree in Church History from Princeton
Theological Seminary .
He is
the recipient of many awards such as the prestigious Franklin Delano
Roosevelt Freedom of Worship Medal and was listed in the December 1999
issue of Ebony Magazine as one of the 100 "Most Important Blacks in the
World in the 201h Century." He has also been awarded more than 80
honorary degrees from America's leading colleges and universities.
Mr.
Gray is married to the former Andrea Dash. They have three sons, William
H. Gray IV, Justin and Andrew.
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