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EO #9980, Regulations Governing Fair Employment Practices within the Federal Establishment, July 26, 1948, signed by President Truman

U.S. National Archives

U.S. National Archives
United States

On July 26, 1948, President Truman signed Executive Orders 9980 and 9981. The more widely known, EO 9981 desegregated the Armed Forces. Executive Order 9980 was a mandate to integrate the Federal workforce.

At the time, Washington, DC—our nation’s capital—was a segregated city. “Whites only” or “Negroes” signs designated separate lunchrooms, work places, and restrooms. The Federal workforce was segregated, too, a policy implemented under President Wilson’s administration. When President Truman entered the White House, only one agency—the Department of the Interior—was integrated.

Frustrated by Congressional inaction and armed with documentation from his Committee on Civil Rights that found discriminatory practices pervaded Federal agencies, President Truman issued the executive order. To give Executive Order 9980 strength and ensure implementation, Truman made the Presidentially appointed heads of each department or agency responsible. Within a year, eighteen agencies had desegregated.

National Archives, General Records of the U.S. Government

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  • Title: EO #9980, Regulations Governing Fair Employment Practices within the Federal Establishment, July 26, 1948, signed by President Truman
U.S. National Archives

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