Coleman Young (born May 24, 1918, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, U.S.—died November 29, 1997, Detroit, Michigan) was an American politician, who was the first African American mayor of Detroit, Michigan (1974–93).
In 1923 Young moved with his family from the South to Detroit. Unable to obtain a scholarship to attend college, he began working on an assembly line at the Ford Motor Company, where he became involved in union activities and civil rights issues. He was drafted during World War II and served with the Tuskegee Airmen, the first African American flying unit in the U.S. military. Near the end of his service, he was briefly imprisoned for trying to desegregate an officers’ club. After returning to Detroit, he helped found in 1951 the National Negro Labor Council (NNLC), which sought jobs for African Americans. In 1952 Young, who had developed a reputation as a radical, was called before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. His pugnacious testimony earned him widespread publicity, and he later disbanded the NNLC so that he would not have to turn over its membership list. Blacklisted by labour organizations, he was forced to take a series of odd jobs before becoming an insurance salesman.
In 1964 Young was elected to the Michigan Senate, and four years later he became the Democratic National Committee’s first African American member. In 1973 he ran for mayor of Detroit and won a close election. At the time, the city was struggling with unemployment, crime, and suburban flight. As mayor, Young sought to revitalize Detroit, attracting new businesses, reforming the police department, and overseeing major construction projects. Outspoken and often controversial, Young proved popular with African American voters—he was reelected an unprecedented four times—but alienated many in the white community. Faced with failing health, he decided not to run for reelection in 1993. His autobiography, Hard Stuff (written with Lonnie Wheeler), was published in 1994.