Matthew Little's rise to prominence in Minnesota's civil rights movement began with a simple quest: to get a job on the all-white Minneapolis Fire Department.
In the early 1950s, the young black World War II veteran passed the written test and scored top grades on the physical exam, but failed the oral interview.
He sought out one of the three retired fire officials who had interviewed him to ask what he did wrong.
Explaining that firefighters lived in close quarters, the man told him, "I don't think it was going to work."
Little was angry, but undeterred, said his daughter Titilayo Bediako.
"That's one of the things that spurred him to get involved in the civil rights movement," she said Monday. "He said it made him mad — it made him really mad."
Little, who died Sunday at age 92 of complications from pneumonia, joined the Minneapolis NAACP, soon became its president and for the next half-century played a pivotal role in many civil rights struggles that played out in Minnesota.
"He was certainly one of the most important persons in the realm of social justice that this community has produced," says Mahmoud El-Kati, professor emeritus at Macalester College and himself a longtime civil rights activist. "He was always out front."