Spingarn Medal

verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites
Britannica Websites
Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students.
Related Topics:
African Americans

Spingarn Medal, gold medal awarded annually by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) since 1915 to honour “the man or woman of African descent and American citizenship who shall have made the highest achievement during the preceding year or years in any honorable field” (as it was phrased when the award was founded). The award was intended both to draw the attention of the general public to African American achievement and to inspire young African Americans. The Spingarn Medal, which was established on June 29, 1914, is named for Joel Elias Spingarn, a white writer, literary critic, educator, and civil rights activist who served as chairman of the Board of Directors (1913–19), treasurer (1919–30), and president (1930–39) of the NAACP.

Since it was first awarded in 1915, the Spingarn Medal has been awarded each year, with some exceptions. The NAACP is in charge of administering the award, with Howard and Fisk universities designated as alternates should the NAACP ever become defunct. The first NAACP committee to award the medal included prominent leaders such as John Hope, the president of Morehouse College; John Hurst, bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church; and U.S. President William Howard Taft. The committee that year selected Ernest Everett Just, a former professor and head of physiology at Howard University Medical School, as the first recipient of the Spingarn Medal.

Spingarn Medal winners include W.E.B. Du Bois (1920), Richard Wright (1941), A. Philip Randolph (1942), Paul Robeson (1945), Martin Luther King, Jr. (1957), Duke Ellington (1959), Langston Hughes (1960), Hank Aaron (1976), Bill Cosby (1985), Maya Angelou (1994), and Ruby Dee (2008).

The Spingarn Medal recipients are listed in the table.

Spingarn Medal*
year name field
*The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) presents the medal for distinguished achievement among African Americans. The medal is named for early NAACP activist Joel E. Spingarn. The year listed does not always reflect the year in which the award was received.
1915 Ernest Everett Just zoologist, marine biologist
1916 Charles Young army officer
1917 Harry Thacker Burleigh singer, composer
1918 William Stanley Braithwaite poet, literary critic
1919 Archibald Henry Grimké lawyer, diplomat, social activist
1920 W.E.B. Du Bois sociologist, social activist
1921 Charles S. Gilpin actor
1922 Mary Burnett Talbert civil rights activist
1923 George Washington Carver agricultural chemist
1924 Roland Hayes singer, composer
1925 James Weldon Johnson diplomat, anthologist
1926 Carter G. Woodson historian
1927 Anthony Overton businessman
1928 Charles W. Chesnutt writer
1929 Mordecai W. Johnson minister, university president
1930 Henry Alexander Hunt educator, government official
1931 Richard B. Harrison actor
1932 Robert Russa Moton educator, civil rights leader
1933 Max Yergan civil rights leader
1934 William T.B. Williams educator
1935 Mary McLeod Bethune educator, social activist
1936 John Hope (posthumously) educator
1937 Walter White civil rights leader
1938 no medal awarded
1939 Marian Anderson opera singer
1940 Louis T. Wright surgeon, civil rights leader
1941 Richard Wright writer
1942 A. Philip Randolph labour and civil rights leader
1943 William H. Hastie lawyer, judge
1944 Charles Richard Drew surgeon, research scientist
1945 Paul Robeson actor, singer, social activist
1946 Thurgood Marshall lawyer, U.S. Supreme Court justice
1947 Percy L. Julian chemist
1948 Channing H. Tobias civil rights leader
1949 Ralph Bunche diplomat, scholar
1950 Charles Hamilton Houston (posthumously) lawyer
1951 Mabel Keaton Staupers nurse, social activist
1952 Harry T. Moore (posthumously) civil rights activist, educator
1953 Paul R. Williams architect
1954 Theodore K. Lawless dermatologist, philanthropist
1955 Carl Murphy journalist, civil rights activist
1956 Jackie Robinson baseball player
1957 Martin Luther King, Jr. civil rights leader
1958 Daisy Bates and the Little Rock Nine school integration activists
1959 Duke Ellington jazz musician
1960 Langston Hughes writer
1961 Kenneth Bancroft Clark educator
1962 Robert C. Weaver economist, government official
1963 Medgar Evers (posthumously) civil rights activist
1964 Roy Wilkins civil rights leader
1965 Leontyne Price opera singer
1966 John H. Johnson publisher
1967 Edward W. Brooke III lawyer, U.S. senator
1968 Sammy Davis, Jr. singer, dancer, entertainer
1969 Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr. civil rights lobbyist
1970 Jacob Lawrence painter
1971 Leon H. Sullivan minister, civil rights activist
1972 Gordon Parks filmmaker, photographer, writer
1973 Wilson C. Riles educator
1974 Damon Keith lawyer, judge
1975 Hank Aaron baseball player
1976 Alvin Ailey dancer, choreographer
1977 Alex Haley writer
1978 Andrew Young civil rights leader
1979 Rosa Parks civil rights activist
1980 Rayford W. Logan educator, writer
1981 Coleman A. Young labour activist, politician
1982 Benjamin E. Mays educator, minister
1983 Lena Horne singer, actress
1984 Thomas Bradley politician
1985 Bill Cosby actor, comedian
1986 Benjamin L. Hooks civil rights leader, government official
1987 Percy Ellis Sutton civil rights activist, politician
1988 Frederick Douglass Patterson (posthumously) educator
1989 Jesse Jackson minister, politician, civil rights leader
1990 L. Douglas Wilder politician
1991 Colin Powell army general, government official
1992 Barbara Jordan lawyer, politician
1993 Dorothy I. Height social activist
1994 Maya Angelou poet
1995 John Hope Franklin historian, educator
1996 A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr. lawyer, judge, scholar
1997 Carl T. Rowan journalist, commentator
1998 Myrlie Evers-Williams civil rights activist
1999 Earl G. Graves, Sr. publisher
2000 Oprah Winfrey television personality, actress, entrepreneur
2001 Vernon E. Jordan, Jr. lawyer, civil rights activist
2002 John Lewis politician, civil rights activist
2003 Constance Baker Motley judge, lawyer, civil rights activist
2004 Robert L. Carter judge, lawyer, civil rights activist
2005 Oliver W. Hill lawyer, civil rights activist
2006 Benjamin S. Carson, Sr. physician
2007 John Conyers, Jr. politician
2008 Ruby Dee actress, writer
2009 Julian Bond legislator, civil rights activist
2010 Cicely Tyson actress, civil rights activist
2011 Frankie Muse Freeman civil rights activist, lawyer
2012 Harry Belafonte musician, actor, civil rights activist
2013 Jessye Norman opera singer
2014 Quincy Jones composer, producer
2015 Sidney Poitier actor, social activist
2016 Nathaniel R. Jones judge, lawyer, civil rights activist
2017 not awarded
2018 Willie L. Brown, Jr. politician
2019 Patrick Gaspard social activist
2020 not awarded
2021 Cato T. Laurencin engineer, physician, scientist
This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.