Former Secretary of State Colin Powell Dies at Age 84


Former Secretary of State Colin Powell Dies at Age 84

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By: Alanna Nash   En español Published October 18, 2021


When Colin Powell was 16 and living in the South Bronx, he wrote an essay about himself as part of an application to the City College of New York, which he would enter just shy of his 17th


birthday. Almost 40 years later, the first Black U.S. Secretary of State and Chairman of the Joint Chief of Staffs was writing a book, My American Journey, and retrieved that essay, along


with his kindergarten report cards and transcripts of grades, from the board of education.


“What was so striking about it,” Powell, who died at 84 on Oct. 18 of complications from COVID-19 and multiple myeloma, a cancer of the blood, told AARP in 2012, “is that I’m pretty much


the same person [now]. What I see in the mirror is still that 16-year-old kid going to college, and that 21-year-old lieutenant going in the army, and that 25-year-old lieutenant getting


married. I have said to many people over the years that I have worked hard to not be terribly different.


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“Yes, I now have four stars [as a general]. Yes, I’m a cabinet officer, but I’m still that 16-year-old kid. And I have found that not just to be a nice way to be, but a very effective


system of leadership and management.”


The son of Jamaican immigrants who rose to the highest levels of the federal executive branch, Colin Luther Powell, by all accounts, achieved his goal of remaining humble, accessible and


kind (he also possessed a quick sense of humor), even as he balanced the enormous responsibility of his positions and his role as a trailblazer for people of color.


When word of his death came today, politicians and public figures of both major parties honored the towering figure as a patriot, military leader, and shaper of domestic and international


relations in his role as statesman. Powell, a Republican who valued common sense and fairness over party, had argued for social progression on such issues as women’s right to choose and


gay rights, more typically associated with Democrats.