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Fields, Cleo (1962- )

Cleo Fields, politician, lawyer, and United States Representative from Louisianas Fourth Congressional District (1993-97), was born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana on November 22, 1962.  At four years old, Fields lost his father, Isidore Fields, a dockworker, in a car crash. His mother, Alice Fields, supported her ten children by working as a maid and taking in laundry.  Fields started working at a young age to help his family and save for college.

In 1980, Fields graduated from McKinley High School.  He attended Southern University, where he majored in mass communications and then enrolled in its College of Law.  In his final year of law school, he ran for the Louisiana State Senate. At twenty-four years old, Fields became the youngest elected state senator in Louisiana’s history. Fields championed environmental issues, job creation for minorities, and the elimination of illegal drugs.

In 1990, Fields ran for the House seat from Louisianas Eighth Congressional District, but he lost to Republican Clyde Holloway.  After Louisiana redrew district lines, Louisianas Fourth Congressional District elected Fields to the House of Representatives in 1992.  Fields became Louisiana’s second African American congressman.  

During his two terms, Fields served as parliamentarian as well as on the Small Business, Banking, Finance, and Urban Affairs Committees.  His main legislative goals included job creation, affordable health care, and decreasing the deficit.  

Throughout his terms, lawsuits challenged the Fourth District’s new borders, which Fields helped create during his time in the state senate.  The plaintiffs claimed that the borders violated their voting rights.  Court decisions forced the state to redraw the district’s borders five times. Fields appealed to the Supreme Court and state legislature about the fifth border change, which resulted from a 1996 United States District Court decision. However, his petitions did not prevent the state legislature from agreeing to new borders, which excluded Fields’s home from the

National Trust for Historic Preservation

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