News Articles
A Man with a Vision

For forty-years, National Urban Fellows has addressed one the most important and challenging issues faced by America – the under-representation of people of color and women in leadership – particularly in public sectors.

National Urban Fellows has grown from a model program solution, brought about by the civil rights era, to help the nation cope with the pervasive violence and social unrest; the results of discrimination, segregation, poverty, police brutality, unemployment, and poor housing, and has grown into one of the country’s oldest and finest leadership development organizations for people of color and women.

It took the leadership and commitment of many individuals and institutions to create the ground-breaking program that was designed to bridge the gap between city governments and minority communities.

As we celebrate this 40th Anniversary year, it is with gratitude that we acknowledge and extend appreciation to the Founder of National Urban Fellows, the Honorable Frank Logue, whose steadfast vision to prepare qualified and promising people of color and women for leadership, set the course for America’s future leadership.

Today, National Urban Fellows has graduated well over 1,100 people of color and women who hold policymaking positions as mayors, city and county managers, commissioners and officers of major nonprofit and philanthropic organizations throughout the country. We remain confident that these are the leaders who will work to ensure equity and social justice for all people, and who will effective positive change in U.S. communities and ultimately the nation.