IBT - International Brotherhood of Teamsters

03/20/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 03/20/2026 13:53

Teamsters Celebrate Life of Longtime Leader R.V. Durham

Ralph Vinson "R.V." Durham, who led Teamsters Local 391 for more than a quarter century, passed away on March 17, 2026.

From a young age, Durham understood the value of a hard day's work, delivering newspapers, laboring in cotton fields, and helping in his family's restaurant. Those early lessons shaped a lifetime commitment to fighting for dignity on the job.

He began his Teamsters journey in 1950 as a truck driver for Roadway Express at 19 years old. He learned the job from the ground up, earning the respect of the rank-and-file members he would one day lead at Local 391. A year later, he married Ethel "Skeets" McDaniels, and together they built a family, raising two children.

Over a remarkable 45-year career, Durham rose through the ranks - first as a business agent, then as Secretary-Treasurer, and ultimately as President, a position he held from 1969 to 1995. Even as his responsibilities grew, he led with the perspective of someone who had done the work himself, earning the trust of the membership and never losing sight of who he represented.

In 1973, Durham took his fight to Washington, D.C., where he founded and led the Teamsters Safety and Health Department while serving as International Vice President on the General Executive Board. He appeared numerous times before Congress and worked closely with OSHA to strengthen worker protections.

Drawing on his experience behind the wheel, Durham worked across multiple presidential administrations. Appointed by Presidents Ford, Carter, and Reagan to the National Highway Safety Advisory Committee, he pushed back against harmful deregulation that threatened the livelihoods of Teamsters in the trucking industry. He understood what was at stake because he had lived it.

At a time when the trucking industry faced growing threats, Durham became a national voice for protecting worker safety and union rights. Still, he never stepped away from his local, commuting from Winston-Salem, N.C., to Washington several days a week as he continued to serve as President of Local 391.

In 1991, during the first direct election of International Union officers by the rank-and-file, Durham ran for General President, bringing his message of strong, member-driven leadership to Teamsters across the country. He later returned home to Local 391, where he continued to serve for another five years before retiring.

Retirement didn't slow him down. Durham remained a constant presence at the Local 391 union hall, regularly attending membership meetings and staying connected to the union he loved. He was known for his steady optimism, his deep loyalty, and his unwavering belief in the power of working people standing together.

"The strength of our union is built on leaders like R.V. Durham - people who came up from the shop floor, never forgot where they came from, and spent their lives fighting to make things better for the next generation," said Teamsters General President Sean M. O'Brien. "R.V. represented the best of the Teamsters. He dedicated his life to protecting members, raising industry standards, and proving what solidarity can achieve. Our union is stronger because of him, and our thoughts are with the Durham family."

Outside the union, Durham enjoyed traveling, visiting destinations across the United States and Europe with his family. He is survived by his two children, two grandchildren, and four siblings. His legacy lives on in the generations of Teamsters he mentored, the contracts he helped secure, and the union he devoted his life to advancing.

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