The Twin Cities have lost one of its most esteemed and charismatic champions.
Archie Givens Jr., a philanthropist, humanitarian and businessman and the scion of Minnesota's first Black millionaire family, died Wednesday in Minneapolis. He had been suffering from Alzheimer's disease for several years.
"Archie was a Minnesota treasure," U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips said. "One of the most compassionate, kind and influential men in my life. His love of our community was exceeded only by the humility, grace and passion with which he improved it."
Givens, 78, was president of Legacy Management & Development Corp., which in the early 2000s teamed up with McCormack Baron Salazar to build 900 homes on a 123-acre site on Minneapolis' North Side. That project, the Heritage Park development, converted public housing into a thriving community. Givens' company also built the Rondo Community Library in St. Paul and senior housing projects in Edina and elsewhere.
In addition to his success in business, Givens, like other members of his family, championed arts, culture and literacy by giving his time and treasure to theaters, libraries, history projects and a raft of other civic causes. He also served on boards, including for the University of Minnesota and Penumbra Theatre, and contributed generously.
"Archie is part of the broader Minnesota tradition of enlightened philanthropic support that sees both public policy and arts and culture as a central part of ensuring the health of our democracy," said retired University of Minnesota professor John Wright, who was a student with Givens at the U. "His family is in there with the Pillsburys and Daytons and others who really have been vital to the health and well-being of the state."
Givens' father, Archie Givens Sr., was a trailblazing businessman who with his wife, Phebe O'Shields Givens, built a successful real estate development business and became the state's first Black millionaire family. In the 1950s, they built "the nation's first federally supported commercial housing open to all races," according to a 2017 citation from the Minneapolis City Council designating those homes historic.
The Givens children, Archie and Roxanne, were raised with similar expectations and privileges.