Delany was the eighth of ten children born to the Rev. Henry Beard Delany (1858–1928), the first Black person elected Suffragan Bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States, and his wife Nannette James (Logan) Delany (1861–1956), an educator. Henry Beard Delany was born into slavery in St. Mary's, Georgia, but later became educated and advanced as a priest and the first African-American bishop in the Episcopal Church. Delany was born and raised on the campus of St. Augustine's School (now University) in Raleigh, North Carolina, where his father was the Vice-Principal and his mother, a teacher and administrator. Delany was a 1919 graduate of the school.
Throughout his early years, Delany believed he would follow in his father’s footsteps and become a clergyman within the Episcopal Church. Having grown up on the campus of historically blackSaint Augustine's College where his parents taught, Delany had been shielded from the rigid system of racial segregation that dominated North Carolina in the early twentieth century.[6]
Delany later married again, to Willetta S. Mickey, in a ceremony performed by Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia. A native of Yonkers, New York, she had attended Howard University. The couple met while she served as Delany's secretary at the Tax Commission. Mrs. Delany was Founder and President of Adopt-A-Child, an interracial interface program of 14 public and private agencies which came together to find homes for Black, Hispanic and minority children needing adoption who, in her words, "were forced to spend their formative years in hospitals, shelters, institutions and boarding homes". She played a vital role in organizing forums and interstate conferences to discuss the inequities and unique issues related to their adoption.[9][10]
Mrs. Willetta Delany was one of the earliest African-American women on the Board of Spence-Chapin Adoption Service, along with Mrs. Rachel Robinson, Mrs. Ralph Bunche, and Marian Anderson. In support of the agency's outreach efforts, Eleanor Roosevelt was the featured speaker for a Spence-Chapin conference. Mrs. Roosevelt was quoted in The New York Times as saying, "No matter what the color of their skin, all our children must be looked at as the future rich heritage of the country."[12]
Mayor LaGuardia appointed Delany in 1934 as city tax commissioner. He later appointed Delany as a judge on the Court of Domestic Relations in 1942.[15][8]
During the Harlem riot of 1935, Delany and Mayor LaGuardia walked through the streets together to try to quiet things down.[16] After the riot, Mayor LaGuardia appointed Delany and others, including historian E. Franklin Frazier, poet Countee Cullen, and labor leader A. Philip Randolph, to the Mayor's Commission on Conditions in Harlem. Their investigatory commission found that the riot was caused not by communist agitators, as some had speculated, but by frustration due to conditions of economic deprivation, racial discrimination, and an unresponsive city government.[9][8]
On January 1, 1942, Delany was appointed as Justice of the Family Court by Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia and served until 1955.[8] During his tenure, Judge Delany established himself as a compassionate and humane Justice as well as a strong and passionate advocate for civil rights. In 1943, he hosted the formal opening of a Harlem campaign for a Colored Orphan Asylum in response to inadequate services supplied to black children by various religious organizations.[8] Delany condemned religious groups, the United States military, and employers for their treatment of blacks, Jews, and Catholics.[8] Delany also served on the National Advisory Board of the Commission on Law and Social Action (CLSA), the legal arm of the American Jewish Congress (AJC).[8]
Delany's advice on juvenile issues was "eagerly sought by many individuals and organizations."[18] His many admirers and colleagues cited the understanding, fairness and delicacy with which he approached his cases. In 1946, alongside Justice Jane Bolin, Delany criticized the practice of racial matching of probation officers with juvenile probationers.[8] He was also an active member of the Citizens’ Committee for Children of New York City.[8] Delaney's critics, however, labeled him too "liberal."[19] His briefs were often interpreted by his critics as "left-wing views". Some believed this was the "rationale" for Mayor Wagner's not reappointing Delany in 1955, although he was backed by several bar associations. The New York Times claimed that Mayor Robert F. Wagner declined to reappoint Delany because he held communist views; Delany believed the reason was his vocal and public stand on civil rights and against second-class citizenship for Black Americans. The NAACP and the National Urban League supported Judge Delany and protested the Mayor's decision.[19]
In 1955, during a stay in Hartford, Connecticut, to speak on juvenile delinquency, Judge Delany filed a complaint of second-class treatment with Hartford's Commission on Civil Rights. The Statler Hotel had denied him a room although he had a reservation, because he was Black. The hotel staff offered him instead the use of a cot in a meeting room.[19]
After the trial, King wrote that the verdict was a "turning point" in his life and praised Delany and his other principal lawyer, William Robert Ming:
"They brought to the courtroom wisdom, courage, and a highly developed art of advocacy; but most important, they brought the lawyers' indomitable determination to win. After a trial of three days, by the sheer strength of their legal arsenal, they overcame the most vicious Southern taboos festering in a virulent and inflamed atmosphere and they persuaded an all-white jury to accept the word of a Negro over that of white men."[22]
In his autobiography, Dr. King described the trial this way:
"This case was tried before an all-white Southern jury. All of the State's witnesses were white. The judge and the prosecutor were white. The courtroom was segregated. Passions were inflamed. Feelings ran high. The press and other communications media were hostile. Defeat seemed certain, and we in the freedom struggle braced ourselves for the inevitable. There were two men among us who persevered with the conviction that it was possible, in this context, to marshal facts and law and thus win vindication. These men were our lawyers-Negro lawyers from the North: William Ming of Chicago and Hubert Delany from New York."[23]
"I am frank to confess that on this occasion I learned that truth and conviction in the hands of a skillful advocate could make what started out as a bigoted, prejudiced jury, choose the path of justice. I cannot help but wish in my heart that the same kind of skill and devotion which Bill Ming and Hubert Delany accorded to me could be available to thousands of civil rights workers, to thousands of ordinary Negroes, who are every day facing prejudiced courtrooms."[23][24]
King's wife, Coretta Scott King, discussed the trial in her autobiography: "A southern jury of twelve white men had acquitted Martin. It was a triumph of justice, a miracle that restored your faith in human good."[25]
Low-income housing
In May 1963, Governor of New YorkNelson Rockefeller appointed Delany as Chairman of a powerful Temporary State Commission on Low-income Housing. The commission held all the authority of a full legislative public inquiry with the ability to call witnesses and subpoena records. The commission proposed using state funds to help low-income families live in middle-income housing projects and privately owned apartments as a means of promoting integration. By proposing to subsidize low-income families, placing them in middle-income units built with state assistance, the Delany commission ultimately went far beyond the original Rockefeller plan.[26] This early commission became the forerunner to creation of the New York State Urban Development Corporation (UDC) in 1968. The UDC was designed and given broad powers and resources to "improve the physical environment for low-and moderate-income families." Under Governor Rockefeller, and by 1973, the UDC (known today as the Empire State Development Corporation) had successfully created over 88,000 units of housing for limited income families and the aging.[27]
POWELL ET AL. v. McCORMACK, SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, ET AL Powell v. McCormack, 395 U.S. 486, 89 S. Ct. 1944 (1969) No. 138
Argued: April 21, 1969, Decided: June 16, 1969
In November 1966, petitioner Adam Clayton Powell, an African Americancongressman from New York, had been duly elected to serve in the House of Representatives for the 90th Congress. However, he was denied his seat when a majority of the House voted to exclude him[citation needed] with the adoption of House Resolution No 278. The House's action followed charges that Powell had misappropriated public funds and abused the process of the New York courts. Powell and a group of his constituents filed suit in the district court against Speaker of the House John McCormack and other House officials, alleging that the resolution to exclude him violated his constitutional right to serve so long as he met the specified age, citizenship, and residence requirements. The suit claimed that the House could exclude him only if it found he failed to meet the standing requirements of age, citizenship, and residence contained in Art. I, 2, of the Constitution - requirements the House specifically found Powell met - and thus had excluded him unconstitutionally. The District Court dismissed petitioner's complaint "for want of jurisdiction of the subject matter." A panel of the Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal, although on somewhat differ 29 U.S. App. D.C. 354, 395 F.2d 577, affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded to the District Court for entry of a declaratory judgment and for further proceedings.[28]
Powell, who was subsequently re-elected to his seat in a special election, sought back pay along with recompense for other damages.[citation needed]
Death
On December 28, 1990, Delany died at the age of 89 in Manhattan where he lived the majority of his life. He was survived by a wife, Willetta Delany, a daughter, Dr. Madelon Delany Stent; professor of education at City College of New York and a son, Dr. Harry Mickey Delany; Chairman of the Department of Surgery Jacobi Medical Center and North Central Bronx Hospital, as well as six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.[7]
2024: In New York City, on May 11th 2024 - what would be Delanys 123rd birthday - a street was co-named "Judge Hubert T. Delany Way" in honor of Delanys life and contributions to the Harlem community. The location, the corner at West 145th Street and Riverside Drive, was where Judge Delany lived."[30]
Hubert T. Delany was the eighth of ten children born to the Rev. Henry Beard Delany (1858–1928), the first Black person elected Bishop Suffragan of the Episcopal Church in the United States. His siblings were:
Henry Beard Delany Jr. (1895–1991) The first Delany to move to New York City. A graduate of New York University and became a well known dentist. Had a private practice in Harlem with his sister Bessie.[34]
Laura Edith Delany (1903–1993) A graduate from Hunter College in NYC and became a school teacher.[34]
Samuel Ray Delany (1906–1960) A graduate of St. Augustine's College. He became a mortician and established Levy & Delany Funeral Home in Harlem, New York City.[34]
Founded in 1867 as Saint Augustine's Normal School, the institution first changed its name to Saint Augustine's School in 1893 and then to Saint Augustine's Junior College in 1919 when it began offering college-level coursework. Beginning in the mid-1880s, the children of the Rev. and Mrs. Henry Beard Delany were all born, raised and educated on this campus. The Delanys witnessed a growing St. Augustine's become the first school of nursing in the state of North Carolina for African-Americans. Even today, the Delany family is described as "The First Family of St. Augustine's".
The Delany family began its lengthy relationship with the now historically black college in 1881 when Henry Beard Delany, a former slave from Florida, arrived to study theology.[37] The university further describes the family: "As the children of educators, the younger family members understood the importance of education to the future. Many became teachers committed to working with black students while others received advanced degrees after leaving St. Augustine's. Lemuel Delany, like his parents, remained at the school and served the black community as a surgeon at St. Agnes Hospital. Bessie Delany became a dentist and one of only two black women practicing in New York at the time. Three of the siblings, including Sarah Delany, the first black person in New York to teach high school domestic science, were lifelong educators. The careers of the other Delany children included a judge, an attorney, and two undertakers."[37]
^Higginbotham, Evelyn Brooks; Gates, Henry Louis (2009). Harlem Renaissance Lives from the African American National Biography. Oxford University Press. p. 156.
^ abcdeEvelyn Brooks, Higginbotham; Gates, Henry Louis (2009). Harlem Renaissance Lives: From the African American National Biography. Oxford University Press. pp. 154–6.
^ abSmith Jr., J. Clay (January 1, 1999). Emancipation: The Making of the Black Lawyer, 1844-1944. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 401. ISBN9780812216851.
^Biondi, Martha (June 30, 2009). To Stand and Fight: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City. Harvard University Press. p. 39.
^ abDelany, Hubert T. (December 3, 1957). "Biographical Sketch of Judge Hubert T Delany Retired Justice of the Domestic Relations Court of the City of New York". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
^Delany, Hubert T (November 1956). "Hubert Delany Reports on Israel". The Crisis (63): 517–526.
^State of New York, Public Papers of Nelson A. Rockefeller, Fifty-third Governor of the State of New York, vol. 15, 1973 (Albany, NY: State of New York, 1973), p. 1382.
^Delany, A. Elizabeth; Delany, Sarah L.; Hearth, Amy Hill (1994). Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters' First 100 Years. Dell Publishing. p. Family Tree.