Friday, June 26, 2026
34.5 C
New Delhi

Jesse Jackson dead at 84: Inside his family life, net worth, career and controversies – all you need to know

Jesse Jackson dead at 84: Inside his family life, net worth, career and controversies – all you need to know

FILE – Jesse Jackson joins the crowd before the start of the world welterweight championship bout between Floyd Mayweather Jr., and Manny Pacquiao in Las Vegas on May 2, 2015. (AP Photo/Isaac Brekken, File)

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, one of the most recognisable figures of the American civil rights movement and a former presidential candidate, has died aged 84. His family confirmed he passed away peacefully surrounded by loved ones, without specifying a cause. In a statement they wrote: “Our father was a servant leader – not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voicelessa, and the overlooked around the world. We shared him with the world, and in return, the world became part of our extended family. His unwavering belief in justice, equality, and love uplifted millions, and we ask you to honour his memory by continuing the fight for the values he lived by.” For more than half a century Jackson occupied a singular space in American life: preacher, organiser, negotiator, campaigner and political candidate. Admirers saw moral authority and endurance. Critics often saw ambition and controversy. Both were part of a public career that stretched from the segregation era to the modern Democratic Party.

From segregated South to national politics

Born Jesse Louis Burns in Greenville, South Carolina in 1941, Jackson grew up during the Jim Crow era, the son of a cotton grader and a hairdresser. His mother later married Charles Henry Jackson, who formally adopted him in 1957. His activism began early. In 1960 he joined seven others in entering a whites-only public library in Greenville County, an act that led to arrest and jail. By 1966 he had been chosen by Martin Luther King Jr. to lead the Chicago branch of Operation Breadbasket, an economic justice initiative within the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. After King’s assassination in 1968, Jackson emerged as one of the most prominent successors to that movement’s public voice. He founded Operation PUSH in 1971 and later the National Rainbow Coalition, organisations that eventually merged into the Rainbow-PUSH Coalition. The coalition brought together Black, White, Latino, Asian American, Native American and LGBTQ supporters and helped reshape the Democratic Party’s coalition politics.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, who led the Civil Rights Movement for decades after King, has died at 84

FILE – Civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., right, and his aide Rev. Jesse Jackson are seen in Chicago, Aug. 19, 1966. (AP Photo/Larry Stoddard, File)

Jackson ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1984 and again in 1988, campaigns that broadened minority participation in national politics even though they did not secure the nomination. In 2000 he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Bill Clinton and also served as a diplomatic envoy, negotiating releases of Americans held abroad in Syria, Cuba, Iraq and Serbia. For several years he also hosted CNN’s programme Both Sides with Jesse Jackson.

Family life, children and public controversy

Jackson married Jacqueline Lavinia Brown in December 1962. Together they had five children: Santita, Jesse Jr., Jonathan, Yusef and Jacqueline. Two sons later entered politics themselves, with Jesse Jackson Jr. serving as a U.S. congressman for Illinois and Jonathan Jackson elected to Congress in 2022.

Jesse Jackson Family

Jackson poses with his family during his 1984 presidential campaign. He and his wife, Jacqueline, had five children together: Jonathan, Santita, Yusef, Jacqueline and Jesse Jr./ Image: David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images

In 2001 Jackson publicly acknowledged fathering a daughter, Ashley, with staff member Karin Stanford. The child had been born in May 1999. Jackson accepted responsibility, provided financial support and maintained a relationship with her. The revelation briefly overshadowed his career and prompted questions about credibility, though he later returned to public advocacy and speaking engagements.

Finances, earnings and later health

Jackson’s net worth has been estimated at about $4 million. Earlier reporting by the Ch icago Tribune in 1987 valued family assets between $400,000 and $600,000 at the time, roughly $1.2–$1.7 million today, with many holdings placed in his wife’s name. Financial disclosures from 2001 showed an annual salary of $120,000 drawn from four organisations he managed, alongside $5,000 per week from CNN for his television programme. His organisations covered more than $614,000 in travel expenses in one year, partly reimbursed by the Democratic National Committee during voter mobilisation efforts.Additional income may also have come from book sales and royalties. Jackson authored or co-authored several titles, including Keeping Hope Alive: Sermons and Speeches (1988), Straight from the Heart (1987), Legal Lynching: Racism, Injustice and the Death Penalty (1995), It’s About the Money! (2000, with Jesse Jackson Jr.) and What’s Right with America (2006), reflecting his focus on civil rights, politics and economic empowerment. In later life Jackson faced significant health challenges. He announced a Parkinson’s disease diagnosis in 2017 and was later confirmed to have progressive supranuclear palsy, a degenerative neurological condition he lived with for over a decade. He was also hospitalised twice with Covid-19 but continued appearing publicly and speaking on civil rights issues. Jackson’s career stretched from sit-ins and arrests to presidential campaigns and international diplomacy. The movement he joined in the 1960s outlived many of its leaders, and he remained one of its most visible participants well into the twenty-first century. Go to Source

Hot this week

Passport fee hiked to Rs 2,500 from Rs 1,500

Govt Thursday announced a steep increase in passport fees across categories, including a 67% hike for issuance or reissue of ordinary passport and a 250% increase in charges under the Tatkal scheme. Read More

70-year case, older than its judges, finally decided

Representative image NEW DELHI: A unique land dispute that dragged through the tenures of all past PMs was finally decided by a Supreme Court bench of Justices Prashant Kumar Mishra and N V Anjaria – both of whom were not born Read More

Will Vaibhav Sooryavanshi Miss Ireland T20I? Coach’s Remark Sparks Buzz

Will 15-year-old batting sensation Vaibhav Sooryavanshi make his international debut today in the opening T20I against Ireland? Read More

Ram Temple Donation Theft Case: 7 Detained For Questioning After FIR; Action Against Big Names Likely Today

The investigation into the alleged theft of donations at the Ram Temple in Ayodhya has entered a crucial phase, with seven people currently in custody and being questioned, sources said. Read More

Topics

Passport fee hiked to Rs 2,500 from Rs 1,500

Govt Thursday announced a steep increase in passport fees across categories, including a 67% hike for issuance or reissue of ordinary passport and a 250% increase in charges under the Tatkal scheme. Read More

70-year case, older than its judges, finally decided

Representative image NEW DELHI: A unique land dispute that dragged through the tenures of all past PMs was finally decided by a Supreme Court bench of Justices Prashant Kumar Mishra and N V Anjaria – both of whom were not born Read More

Will Vaibhav Sooryavanshi Miss Ireland T20I? Coach’s Remark Sparks Buzz

Will 15-year-old batting sensation Vaibhav Sooryavanshi make his international debut today in the opening T20I against Ireland? Read More

Ram Temple Donation Theft Case: 7 Detained For Questioning After FIR; Action Against Big Names Likely Today

The investigation into the alleged theft of donations at the Ram Temple in Ayodhya has entered a crucial phase, with seven people currently in custody and being questioned, sources said. Read More

“The final year of Charlie’s life….”: Candace Owens raises doubts over TPUSA staffer’s story of Charlie Kirk’s final hours

Candace Owens has questioned Turning Point USA spokesperson Andrew Kolvet’s account of Charlie Kirk’s alleged final text message, claiming his public statements differ from what he privately told her after Kirk’s death Read More

“Serve me some dog sh*t”: Kick streamer Clavicular goes viral for brutal review of French restaurant’s organic burger

Kick streamer Clavicular went viral after criticizing an organic burger served at a high-end French restaurant, calling it “barely edible” and saying McDonald’s tasted much better. Read More

1993-batch IPS officer Dixit to be IB chief

Dixit New Delhi: Mahesh Dixit, a 1993-batch IPS officer, was appointed as the next chief of the Intelligence Bureau (IB) on Thursday. He will succeed Tapan Deka whose extension ends in June. Read More

Related Articles