In 1961, at age 40, Young became executive director of the National Urban League. He was unanimously selected by the National Urban League's Board of Directors, succeeding
Lester Granger on October 1, 1961. Within four years he expanded the organization from 38 employees to 1,600 employees; and from an annual budget of $325,000 to one of $6,100,000. Young served as President of the Urban League until his death in 1971. The Urban League had traditionally been a cautious and moderate organization with many white members. During Young's ten-year tenure at the League, he brought the organization to the forefront of the
American Civil Rights Movement. He both greatly expanded its mission and kept the support of influential white business and political leaders. In a 1964 interview with
Robert Penn Warren for the book
Who Speaks for the Negro? and archived at the
Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, Young expressed the mission of the Urban League not as ground-level activism in itself but as the supplement and complement of the activities of all other organizations; he states, "we are the social engineers, we are the strategists, we are the planners, we are the people who work at the level of policy-making, policy implementation, the highest echelons of the corporate community, the highest echelons of the governmental community – both at the federal, state and local level – the highest echelons of the labor movement." As part of the League's new mission, Young initiated programs like "Street Academy", an alternative education system to prepare high school dropouts for college, and "New Thrust", an effort to help local black leaders identify and solve community problems. He also pushed for initiatives like scholarships to recruit
black people into the architecture profession, which has been and continues to be predominantly white. Young also pushed for federal aid to cities, proposing a domestic "
Marshall Plan". This plan, which called for $145 billion in spending over 10 years, was partially incorporated into
President Lyndon B. Johnson's War on Poverty. Young described his proposals for integration, social programs, and affirmative action in his two books,
To Be Equal (1964) and
Beyond Racism (1969). As executive director of the League, Young pushed major corporations to hire more Black people. In doing so, he fostered close relationships with CEOs such as
Henry Ford II, leading some Black people to charge that Young had sold out to the white establishment. Young denied these charges and stressed the importance of working within the system to effect change. Still, Young was not afraid to take a bold stand in favor of civil rights. For instance, in 1963, Young was one of the organizers of the
March on Washington despite the opposition of many white business leaders. " from President Johnson (1966) Despite his reluctance to enter politics himself, Young was an important advisor to Presidents
Kennedy,
Johnson, and
Nixon. In 1968, representatives of President-elect Richard Nixon tried to interest Young in a
Cabinet post, but Young refused, believing that he could accomplish more through the Urban League. Young had a particularly close relationship with President Johnson, and in 1969, Johnson honored Young with the highest civilian award, the
Presidential Medal of Freedom. Young, in turn, was impressed by Johnson's commitment to civil rights. Despite their close personal relationship, Young was frustrated by Johnson's attempts to use him to balance
Martin Luther King's opposition to the increasingly unpopular
Vietnam War. Young publicly supported Johnson's war policy, but came to oppose the war after the end of Johnson's presidency. In 1968, as part of an FBI organized
COINTELPRO operation against the Black liberation movement, Herman B. Ferguson and Arthur Harris were convicted of conspiring to murder Young. The police infiltrators who concocted this frame-up portrayed it as a "Black revolutionary plot." The trial took place in the
New York State Supreme Court, with
Justice Paul Balsam presiding. == Contribution to the American Institute of Architects ==