FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM  FEBRUARY 6, 2020 • THE QUEENS COURIER 57 
  black history month 
 Building Futures: The honorable Archie Spigner and his place in Queens history 
 BY JAY HERSHENSON 
 Th  ere is a large sign above the door of  
 the Guy R. Brewer United Democratic  
 Club in St. Albans, where Queens College  
 alumnus, Class of ’72, and District Leader  
 Archie Spigner regularly holds court. It  
 says,  “Barack  OBAMA  for  President.”  
 One cannot easily envision this meeting  
 hall fi lled with red “Make America Great  
 Again” hats, but it would come as no surprise  
 if someday a new fi rst name, like  
 “Michelle,” appeared on that sign. 
 Inside the club is a recently painted,  
 deceptively large, corner meeting hall. On  
 Dec. 18, 2019, Spigner sat attentively at a  
 table for about 90 minutes. He nursed his  
 coff ee to supplement the modest heating  
 system, and reminisced about his 91 years  
 of experience. 
 It began in the town and nearby farmlands  
 of Orangeburg, S.C., where Spigner,  
 the last of fi ve kids, was born on Aug. 27,  
 1928 — a birthday he shared with the late  
 President Lyndon Baines Johnson. If you  
 believe in numerology, then know that later  
 on in his life, Spigner represented the 27th  
 Councilmanic District for, you guessed it,  
 27 years (time to bet that number!). 
 “To say we were a struggling black family  
 is to put a good face on it,” he said, noting  
 that he was always hungry as a child,  
 and that he loved the way his aunt, a  
 school teacher, made sweet potatoes. 
 Th  e family moved in shift s to the northeast  
 in the late 1930s and beyond, some  
 members living with relatives in Stamford,  
 Conn., and others staying behind on a  
 farm. Spigner migrated to Harlem, then to  
 the Bronx, and fi nally, to southeast Queens. 
 Along  the  way,  he  picked  up  loose  
 change shining shoes, helping out in local  
 barber shops (“dust the guys off  and they  
 would give you a nickel or dime.”). He  
 would get married, then go on to work  
 in a shoe factory, a bakery, and as a bus  
 driver, juggling employment with raising  
 a family. He displayed the skills, fortitude  
 and persistence of a street savvy, transplanted  
 southerner. His number one hero  
 was Joe Louis, the great heavyweight boxing  
 champion. 
 Spigner  enrolled  in  Central  Needle  
 Trades  High  School  (a  “fashion  high  
 school”, he calls it) in Manhattan, graduating  
 in 1947. He joined its co-op program  
 and went to work in a shoe factory, no different  
 than the average sweat shop at the  
 time. At the suggestion of a co-worker, he  
 enrolled in the Jeff erson School of Social  
 Science, a prominent left -wing institution  
 where he learned parliamentary procedure— 
 still one of the anchors of politics.  
 He became the factory shop steward and  
 thus began his long association with labor  
 and organizing. 
 Leaving  the  garment  trade,  Spigner  
 became a New York City bus driver and  
 in the mid-1950s, he joined the Negro  
 American Labor Council founded by the  
 late great labor leader, City College alumnus  
 A. Philip Randolph. Spigner organized  
 the Queens Branch of the Negro  
 From l. to r.: Stephen Weinstein, Jay Hershenson, Archie Spigner, Soraya Ciego-Lemur, and Bernard  The exterior of the Guy Brewer Democratic Club. 
 Harrigan 
 American Labor Council. He had been  
 traveling  to  Harlem  from  Queens  for  
 meetings, but there was enough of a critical  
 mass to merit a Jamaica presence. 
 He held the fi rst meetings in his living  
 room in Queens, “even before I had furniture,” 
  he recalls. He assumed the role of  
 secretary or assistant secretary. “I’m a joiner,” 
  Spigner has said. “Th  at’s what I am, I’m  
 a joiner, and I became a volunteer. Who’ll  
 take the minutes? I’ll take the minutes!” 
 One night, Spigner met the late Kenneth  
 N. Browne, an assistant district attorney,  
 at Fuzzy’s on Linden Boulevard. Browne  
 was running for the New York state  
 Assembly.  After  Spigner  
 asked,  “You  need  some  
 help?,” Browne invited  
 him to the local  
 Democratic  Club.  
 Th  ere, he met legendary  
 district leader  
 Guy  R.  Brewer,  
 who asked Spigner to  
 help organize some new  
 troops to gather petition signatures  
 to help Browne qualify  
 for the ballot. Browne won  
 the election. 
 Guy Brewer 
 Brewer was working as the liaison to  
 the  African-American  community  for  
 Queens Borough President Sidney Leviss.  
 Subsequently,  Browne  became  a  civil  
 court judge and Brewer won the vacated  
 Assembly seat. Brewer was obliged to  
 give up his district leader position because  
 he could not hold it simultaneously with  
 the legislative seat.   He asked Archie to  
 become district leader and Spigner moved  
 into Borough Hall to take Brewer’s place  
 there.  Th  e musical chairs were humming. 
 “When I met people like Guy Brewer  
 and Ken Browne, I recognized that I needed  
 some (more) education,” Spigner said. 
 He enrolled in classes at St. Monica’s  
 Church in Jamaica — where York College  
 stands today — to strengthen his academic  
 skills. He was admitted to an associate degree  
 program at Queens College in the mid- 
 1960s, earned a bachelor’s degree in political  
 science from QC in 1972 and went on to pursue  
 graduate studies at the college. (Spigner is  
 particularly proud of his several family members  
 who graduated from Queens College.) 
 In 1974, the New York City Council was  
 expanded from 35 to 51 members. Tired  
 of trekking to Albany, Brewer wanted to  
 join the Council and have Spigner replace  
 him in the Assembly. Spigner demurred.  
 Th  e Democratic Club’s board of directors  
 voted — by secret ballot — to resolve  
 the dispute. Winning by one vote, Spigner  
 went on to become a City Councilman and  
 then deputy majority leader, appointed by  
 Speaker Peter Vallone. During his 27-year  
 tenure, Spigner chaired the Committees  
 of Housing and Buildings, and Economic  
 Development, and the Legislative Offi  ce  
 of  the  Budget  Review.  A  twoterm  
 limit was imposed on  
 Council members in a  
 1993 referendum and,  
 subsequently, Archie  
 left  the City Council. 
 On May 6, 2005,  
 Borough  President  
 and Queens College  
 alumna Helen Marshall  
 — many credit Spigner  
 for  securing  her  nomination  
 by the Queens County  
 Democratic  Party  —  proclaimed  
 “Archie Spigner Day” boroughwide. 
  At a ceremony that day, federal offi  - 
 cials renamed a United States Post Offi  ce  
 in St. Albans in his honor. Congressman  
 Gregory Meeks authored the bill.  It passed  
 both the House of Representatives and  
 the Senate and was signed by President  
 George W. Bush. At the event in Queens,  
 Senator Charles Schumer thanked Spigner  
 and his club for strongly supporting him  
 when he ran against Alfonse D’Amato for  
 the United States Senate. 
 From l. to r.: Stephen Weinstein, Jay  
 Hershenson,  Archie  Spigner,  Soraya  
 Ciego-Lemur, and Bernard Harrigan 
 “All of us stand on Archie’s shoulders,”  
 said Schumer, who, according to reporter  
 Amy Lotven, credited Spigner with  
 advancing the election of the fi rst African- 
 American  state  senator,  congressman,  
 New York City mayor, borough president,  
 and county Supreme Court judge. 
 “David Dinkins would not have been  
 mayor if it was not for Spigner,” former  
 Manhattan Borough President Percy  
 Sutton reportedly stated. 
 Many there would have surely attested  
 to Spigner’s longstanding advocacy for  
 York College, including a key meeting he  
 organized with Governor Hugh L. Carey  
 and community leaders at a critical stage  
 in the process to help ensure the building  
 of the current campus in Jamaica. 
 At another occasion, New York state  
 Senator  Leroy  Comrie  spoke  about  
 Archie, his longtime mentor and close  
 friend.  He stated, in part, “Archie is a person  
 that has a keen sense of the dynamic  
 of a situation. He does his homework and  
 is never underprepared. He’s willing to listen  
 to reason. He loves to debate. He loves  
 to write and truly loves the city. . . . He has  
 worked hard for equality to ensure that  
 all are given equal treatment. . . . He has  
 never backed away from an issue in which  
 he has believed.” 
 Still smarting a bit about the imposition  
 of term limits — especially the fact  
 that if you run for offi  ce  without  fi rst  
 obtaining educational credentials, you can  
 fi nd yourself left  out in the cold when  
 your fi nal term concludes — Spigner had  
 advice for young people. “Get a degree in  
 accounting or some other kind of degree.” 
 Th  e  exterior  of  the  Guy  Brewer  
 Democratic Club. 
 Speaking of the cold, outside the Guy R.  
 Brewer United Democratic Club, next to the  
 large “Barack OBAMA” sign above the door,  
 is a smaller sign. It includes Archie Spigner  
 as its district leader. Th  e sign is a reminder  
 that in Spigner’s universe, another election  
 is always around the corner. Th e March  
 2020 special election for Queens Borough  
 President, to fi ll the vacancy caused by  
 Melinda Katz’s election as Queens District  
 Attorney, is heating up. Th  is corner meeting  
 place will be humming again. 
 Jay  Hershenson,  Queens  College’s  
 Vice  President  for  Communications  
 and Marketing and  Senior  Advisor  to  
 the  President,  conducted  an  interview  
 with  Archie  Spigner  with  the  technical  
 assistance  of  the LaGuardia  and Wagner  
 Archives  of  LaGuardia  Community  
 College. Special thanks to Director Richard  
 Lieberman,  Deputy  Director  Soraya  
 Ciego-Lemur,  Assistant  to  the  Director  
 Stephen  Weinstein  and  Videographer  
 Brandon Calva.  Background  materials  
 from the Archives were helpful to the  
 preparation of this article. 
 Archie Spigner (l.)  
 with Gregory Meeks. 
 
				
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