sr979_Read_and_adopted_LC_95_0360_2.html
08 LC 95 0360
Senate Resolution 979
By: Senator Tarver of the 22nd

A RESOLUTION


Recognizing and commending Pilgrim Health and Life Insurance; and for other purposes.

WHEREAS, Pilgrim Health and Life Insurance began in the 1920's as Pilgrim Benevolent Aid Association, collecting small amounts of money from families once a week or so and placing the money in a "benevolent" fund that would guarantee the paid-up policyholder a "decent" burial; and

WHEREAS, Pilgrim Health and Life Insurance was not only the largest black-owned life insurance company in the United States, it was also the largest employer of African-Americans in Augusta, Georgia and several other cities around the South; and

WHEREAS, it was also very successful at diversifying its products over the years, and by the 1930's the Augusta company was writing standard insurance policies and doing business in Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida; and

WHEREAS, by the 1940's it had more than a million dollars in assets; and

WHEREAS, of greatest note is that this remarkable company was founded by an equally remarkable Augusta teenager, Solomon W. Walker, who believed selling benevolent insurance to blacks, who had little or no access to insurance of any kind, was a winner for both the policyholder and the entrepreneur; and

WHEREAS, the young Mr. Walker got the idea while delivering groceries in Augusta and all he needed was $25 to obtain a state certificate to start his own insurance company, so he set about raising the money by turning to family and friends; and

WHEREAS, the little company opened for business in 1898, and with the fire for success that brands all true salesmen, three young men hit the streets selling policies; and

WHEREAS, the company was successful because offering only burial insurance made the premiums affordable for most black prospects, the community got behind the little enterprise, spawned and built by blacks for blacks, and burial insurance filled a terrific need in the black community; and

WHEREAS, in 1905 the company merged with other small companies to create the much more diversified Pilgrim Health and Life Insurance Company and it grew quickly over the next 40 years, making Laney-Walker Boulevard the very anchor of black business in Augusta;

WHEREAS, on its 50th anniversary in 1948, the company had paid $14 million in benefits, while providing executive, clerical, and sales jobs for more than 700 blacks, making it the largest black-owned employer in Augusta; and

WHEREAS, in 1990 the company merged with Atlanta Life Insurance Company and moved its headquarters to Atlanta; and

WHEREAS, in many ways, Pilgrim Health and Life Insurance literally changed the look and outlook of Augusta's black workers.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE that the members of this body join in recognizing and commending Pilgrim Health and Life Insurance for its valuable contributions to the Augusta community and this state.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Secretary of the Senate is authorized and directed to transmit an appropriate copy of this resolution to Pilgrim Health and Life Insurance.