Lewis Howard Latimer One of the most famous African Americans in history is Lewis Howard Latimer, he is most recognized for his invention of the light bulb, Latimer who was born on September 4, 1848 in in Chelsea, Massachusetts and died December 11, 1928 age 80 was a Inventor and engineer. But before the creation that changed the world he was the the son to George and Rebecca Latimer, and the youngest of four children. His parents were former slaves who escaped so their children can have a better life. Lewis Latimer attended Phillips Grammar School in Chelsea, where he studied Mathematics and drafting (engineering), Since Lewis had to take care of his family he often left school and worked with his father for extra money. When Lewis Latimer…
Dred Scott was a important person in America and in the Supreme Court's history. He helped push America towards what's right and the Civil War. Dred Scott was born sometime in 1795 and was born into slavery. He had a brother and a father and mother. His family and him were owned by Peter Blow.…
Supreme Justice Clarence Thomas Born June 23, 1948 in Pin Point near Savannah, Georgia, the second of three children to M.C. Thomas and Leola Williams was named Clarence Thomas. He was a descendant of freed slaves and his family spoke Gullah as a first language. Thomas primarily was raised by his grandfather, Myers Anderson around the age of nine after his mother and siblings were displaced due to a house fire.…
The Anita Hill vs. Clarence Thomas case has been labeled as one of the most controversial cases in history. Clarence Thomas was a 43 year old judge who had just been nominated to the Supreme Court in 1991. Soon after he was nominated, Anita Hill accused him of sexual assault in the workplace during the time that they worked together at the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission. As controversial as this case may have been it only hindered Clarence Thomas’ way up to the Supreme Court. The case should have been looked into more thoroughly and meticulously.…
Throughout the nonfiction book by Jeffrey Toobin, he talks about the justice system and the Supreme Court in the United States and how it functions and also how it has changed over the years in history. The book shows a great look at how individuals such as George W. Bush in how they hold their power and how the justice system affects that. Also giving a great understanding with Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's alienation. It also touches on the topic of a “fight” of conservatives that were taking control or trying to take control of the supreme court. Despite that there were many more republican appointees on the court it fails in the 80s and 90s.…
Thurgood Marshall (July 2, 1908 – January 24, 1993) was an American lawyer, serving as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from October 1967 until October 1991. Marshall was the Court's 96th justice and its first African-American justice. Prior to his judicial service, he successfully argued several cases before the Supreme Court. Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Marshall graduated from the Howard University School of Law in 1933. He established a private legal practice in Baltimore before founding the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, where he served as executive director.…
How would you feel if you lost all your life savings for college, a man named Vivien Thomas an African American man that wasn't even a doctor and made a design for the syndrome for blue babies. He saved a little girl named Eileen Saxon was a blue baby that is when the baby doesn't get enough oxygen because, blood cant flow through the heart. A doctor named Blalock had to do surgery because Thomas wasn't a real doctor and he was African American Here is the story of Vivien Thomas. Vivien Thomas had always wanted to be a doctor since he was eleven years old. He started to save up as he got older and got a job in high school he got a job as a carpenter.…
Since society and society changes with time, the law does as well and this is due to judicial activism. Judicial activism is when courts do not confine themselves to the interpretations of current laws, but instead they create law based on personal or political considerations. The term judicial activism is defined in The Supreme Court by Lawrence Baum as “…A court makes significant changes in public policy, especially in policies that the other branches have established. The most prominent form of activism involves the use of judicial review, the power to overturn acts of other policymakers on the ground that they violate the Constitution”(162). I believe that there are many reasons for why the court has been more activist in some eras than…
Conor Conor Article observations 1.I observed that in 1991 Thurgood Marshall, the first African-American to be appointed to the United States Supreme Court, decided to retire. 2.…
Roy Wilkins: NAACP Leader and Civil Rights Activist “Nothing is more important than a good education.” These were words stated by Roy Wilkins, an important figure in the Civil Rights Movement and a leader of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Roy Wilkins is a significant figure to the Civil Rights Movement because he created notable impacts for the Civil Rights, impressively lead the NAACP and faced difficulties as a remarkable leader. Roy Wilkins was born in St. Louis, Missouri on August 30, 1901. At the age of 4, his mother died and he and his siblings moved in with their aunt and her husband in a low-income community in St. Paul, Minnesota.…
On July 2, 1908 Thurgood Marshall was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He was Norma Williams and William Marshall’s second child (“Thurgood Marshall”, 2015). His mother was an elementary school teacher who taught him the importance of an education. She encouraged Thurgood and his brother to learn and think for themselves. His father was a waiter at a whites-only country club who would frequently visit the courthouse on his way home and listen to local cases (“Thurgood Marshall”, 2015).…
Thurgood Marshall was born on July 2, 1908, in Baltimore, Maryland. Growing up in Baltimore, Marshall experienced a lot of racial discrimination that shaped his passion for civil rights. The city he lived in had a death rate for African-Americans that was twice that of Caucasians, and due to separations of white and colored, Marshall was forced to go to an all-black grade school. One time he was unable to use the bathroom because all public restrooms were reserved for whites. Marshall's first major court case came in 1933 when he successfully sued the University of Maryland to admit a young African American Amherst University graduate named Donald Gaines Murray.…
Booker T. Washington acted as a black leader within the Progressive Era, fighting against racism for blacks. He was a dominant leader, and he additionally had the advantage of obtaining the presidents on his facet. Booker T. Washington was born on Gregorian calendar month five, 1856 in Hale's Ford, Virginia. Washington was associate degree consultant to the presidents of Roosevelt and Taft. He advocated associate degree progressive approach to up education and life prospects of black Americans.…
Thurgood Marshall was an extraordinary African American Social equality extremist who changed a great deal of lives in the Assembled States. As an enthusiastic legal advisor and conspicuous Incomparable Court equity, he battled for Social equality and social equity in the courts and trusted that racial mix is best for all schools. Early in his expert life Marshall separated racial hindrances and defeated resistance in spite of the chances. He then turned into a good example of the trained pioneer, in spite of the fact that he didn 't have the religious qualities or allure as Martin Luther Ruler. In any case, as far as accomplishments, the vast majority of us would concur that he ought to be positioned alongside…
Racism has existed since the early 1600s when African Americans were first brought to America against their will to work as slaves. It wasn’t until the Civil Rights Movement, beginning in 1955, that the lives of African Americans started to transform and the U.S. Supreme Court began to terminate “Jim Crow” laws and ban segregation (“Civil Rights Movement,” n.d.). The main goal of eradicating segregation was to reach what is known as “racial equality”, which is the balance between all the races making everyone equal. Since the Civil Right Movement, our country has continued to make steps of improvement including, swearing in our nation’s first black president and the fact that black people and white people are now able to go to the same school.…