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  1. Ralph Harold Metcalfe (1910-1978) nació en Atlanta, Georgia, Estados Unidos, el 29 de mayo de 1910.Hijo de Clarence Metcalfe y Marie Attaway, emigró a Chicago con siete años huyendo de la ...

  2. Ralph Metcalfe later became well known in Chicago politics, serving on the city council under Mayor Daley for many years. In 1970, Metcalfe was elected to the U.S. Congress from the 1st District in Illinois, serving until his death. He also gave yeoman service to the USOC, being elected to their board of directors in 1969.

  3. 26 de sept. de 2023 · En 1955, Ralph Metcalfe dio el salto a la política y ganó la primera de cuatro elecciones como concejal de la ciudad de Chicago. El final de su relación con el cargo llegó en 1971, cuando rompió con el alcalde Richard Daley por unos graves incidentes de brutalidad policial contra la comunidad negra. En 1970, Metcalfe se postuló para un ...

  4. 23 de sept. de 2022 · Here is what you need to know about Ralph Metcalfe. Metcalfe arrived in Milwaukee in the early 1930s Born in Atlanta in 1910, Metcalfe moved to Chicago as a child, where he graduated high school ...

  5. 8 de jun. de 2018 · Ralph Metcalfe 1910 – 1978. Olympic track star, Congressman. At a Glance …. Sources. Ralph Metcalfe gained national attention as an African American pioneer not just in his first career as a sprinter known as “ the world ’ s fastest human, ” but also in his second, as a U.S. Congressman representing part of the city of Chicago.

  6. 28 de sept. de 2023 · Ralph Harold Metcalfe (1910-1978) nació en Atlanta, Georgia, Estados Unidos, el 29 de mayo de 1910. Hijo de Clarence Metcalfe y Marie Attaway, emigró a Chicago con siete años huyendo de la pobreza y la segregación. En 1930, Metcalfe se graduó en la escuela secundaria Edward Tilden High School de Chicago.

  7. 31 de mar. de 2024 · Ralph Metcalfe later became well known in Chicago politics, serving on the city council under Mayor Daley for many years. In 1970, Metcalfe was elected to the U.S. Congress from the 1st District in Illinois, serving until his death. He also gave yeoman service to the USOC, being elected to their board of directors in 1969.