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The National Bar Association And the Afro-American Lawyer PDF

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Howard University Digital Howard @ Howard University Selected Speeches J. Clay Smith, Jr. Collection 8-4-1980 The National Bar Association And the Afro- American Lawyer: A Time For Rootage, Personality and Universal Projection J. Clay Smith Jr. Follow this and additional works at:http://dh.howard.edu/jcs_speeches Part of theLegal Commons Recommended Citation Smith, J. Clay Jr., "The National Bar Association And the Afro-American Lawyer: A Time For Rootage, Personality and Universal Projection" (1980).Selected Speeches.Paper 11. http://dh.howard.edu/jcs_speeches/11 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the J. Clay Smith, Jr. Collection at Digital Howard @ Howard University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Selected Speeches by an authorized administrator of Digital Howard @ Howard University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. * DR. J • CLAY SMITH, JR. I I COMMISSIONER, EQUAL Er1PLOYHENT OPPOR'rUNI'fY COt-lMISSION before the THE NATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION FIFTY-FIFTH ANNUAL CONVENTION FIRST PLENARY SESSION FAIRMONT HOTEL DALLAS, TEXAS AUGUST 4, 1980 THE NATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION A~DTHE AFRO-AMERICAN LAWYER: A TIME FOR ROOTAGE, PERSONALITY AND UNIVERSAL PROJECTION I . Mr. President Robert L. Harris (California), members of the Executive Committee, The Board of Governors, Officers, the 1/ Executive Director,- delegates and affiliates of the National Bar ----_.,-------- * Dr. Smith is a U.S. Commissioner on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), in Washington, D.C. He received his ~.B. degree from The Creighton Univer~ity (Omaha, Nebraska) in 1964; the J.D. degree from The Howard University School of Law (Washington, D.C.) in 1967, the LL.M. and S.J.D. degrees from the George Washington National Law Center (Washington, D.C.) in 1970, 1977 respectively. He is a member of t~e D.C. and Nebraska Bars. !/ Prior to 1973, Elmer C. Jackson, Jr., a former president of the NBA, was deemed to be the Executive Director o~ the MBA. During the time that Jackson acted in this capacity, the national office of the NBA was located in Kansas City, Missouri, where Mr. Jackson practiced law. However, since 1970, there have been four paid Executive Directors, all residing in Washington, D.C. to where the national office was transferred; namely~ Messrs. Donald M. Stocks (1970-1973), Charles E. Smith (1973-1975), Elihu M. Harris (1975-1977), .Philip L. 'Johnson (1977-1978), John L. Crump (1977- ). Regarding comments of or data concerning the above, note, 7 NBA Bull. '1 (June 1975) (Charles E. Smith); 9 NBA Bull. 6 (May 1977) (Elihu Harris); 9 NBA Bull. 5 (July 1977) (Philip L. Johnson). While in the Nation's Capital, the national headquarters offices have been located in the Woodward Building; at the law offices of Charles E. Smith, 1100 17th Street, N.W.; at 2109 E Street, N.W.; at 919 18th Street, N.W.; and at its present location, 1900 L Street, N.W. The dream of the future is for the NBA or the NBA Foundation to own a building housing the Association. Concerning the NBA Foundation, see E. Toles, Fifty Years of Progress For Black Lawyers- The History of the National Bar Association 5 (50th Anniversary Pro gram 1975) hereafter (History of the National Bar Association). See also, Archie B. Weston, Sr., President Speaks, Id. at 6 (50th Anniversary Program). 'NBA - 2 Association. I am deeply honored to have been asked to keynote this, the First- Plenary Session of the National Bar Association . 2/ during its Fifty-Fifth Annual Convention here in Dallas, Texas: This is the first Annual Convention of a new decade and it is ~ appropriate thai this assembly reflect upon its beginning, its ; history, its principles, its policies, its mission and its pur- pose. However important it is for this assembly to plan for the challenges facing Afro-American lawyers of this decade, far more important is your vision to plan for the challenges facing the Afro-American when the new century is born. This nation and the legal and judicial structure of this nation has been significantly enhanced by the substantial contribution that the NBA, its presidents and its members have made in its quest for pure legal existence. 2/ As a Commissioner on the United States Equal Employment Oppor tunity Commission, which is celebrating its fifteenth year of fight ing employment discrimination under the provisions of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and other statutes, I know that the National Bar Association has been one of the great supporters of the ~ommission. The members of the NBA have been in the vanguard for equality in employment and your member lawyers have brought and prevailed in many of the landmark decisions which now make oppor tunity in the workplace for minorities, women, the aged and handi capped, a reality as opposed to a dream. As a matter of facti one of your members was appointed and served with distinct\on on the first Commission: The Honorable Samuel C. Jackson (Washington, D.C.). See, Samuel C. Jackson's Remarks on Title VII and the Civil Rights Act, 53 The Delta Sorority Journal 24 (March 1967) (I am indebted to Ms. Gaynelle Reed Lewis of Washington, D.C. for access to this Volume of The Delta). I view the opportunity to address this assembly as an extension of the good relations that the NBA and the EEOC have mutually enjoyed during the Commission's existence. ----------------- -----.- ----------.--_._-_. - . -----.--# ___ .40 ... _._ • _~_._ 'NBA - 3 3/ In conformity with the theme of this meeting,- I will now 4/ turn to an historical overview of the National Bar Association under the title: The National Bar Association and the Afro-American Lawyer: A Time ior Rootage, Personality and Universal Projection. f I. The NBA: A Progeny of The "Greenville Movement" Between 1890 and 1900 the number of Black lawyers in the nation, particularly in the states of Tennessee, Kentucky and Mississippi, began to grow and to take on the trappings of legal' organizations. Prior to the turn of the twentieth century, as a consequence of the growth of the number of Black lawyers the first bar association organized by "colored lawyers" occurred in the state of Mi~sissippi. The Colored Bar Association of the State of Mississippi held its first annual meeting in the city of Greenville. The keynote address of this inaugural meeting 5/ was made by Josiah T. Settle.- 11 The theme of the Fifty-Fifth Annual NBA Convention is: "Challenges For Black Lawyers In The 80's: Communicating Solution Strategies For Self-Determination." See letter from President Robert L. Harris to NBA membership, May 1980. 4/ This paper is intended as a supplement to the on going efforts by the NBA to write its history and to complement existing litera ture on the NBA. 5/ Settle was graduated from the Howard College Department of Law in 1875, and was admitted to the D.C. Bar before he left to practice law in North Mississippi. :.;,' :.1:. NBA - 4 The Greenville Movement" lives on today through the many affiliates of the National Bar Association. Josiah T. Settle and those associated with the "Greenville r-1ovement" knew that their meeting would have a permanent impact upon a nation which excluded Black lawyers from the mainstream of the society and from 1 the legal profession. However, these "colored lawyers" organized with a purpose and a vision of tithe present and prepared to meet the demands of the future." As Josiah T. Settle stated in his keynote address: (W]boever thought that in [Greenville, Mississippi), would meet the first colored bar association ever organized in the United States? And I think I may safely say that never in the history of the race has there been a meeting fraught with more signifl- 6/ cance. Josiah T. Settle knew then that the survival of the Black lawyer required association and scholarship. He knew that the sur~ vival of "colored citizens" required Black lawyers capable of judicial agitation and creative jurisprudential thought. From the shadows of history, Josiah T. Settle's words ring out here 6/ See Josiah T. Settle, "The Colored Bar Association" In Thoughts, Doings and Sayings of the Race 50 (Edited by J.T. Haley, Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 1, 1895). • 1 NBA - 5 today in Dallas, Texas. [The Colored Bar Association], of which this is the f~rst annual meeting, marks the ajvent t of the c~lored citizen into a new field of labor. It evidences the existence of a suffi- cient number of colored lawyers in ~ississippi engaged in active practice of the law to form a State organization to promote their interests individually and collectively and in doing this they cannot fail to promote the interests of the entire race and to contribute to the general welfare of our common country, for we are as much a part of our composite nationality as any 7/ element it contains. It is important to note that access to legal training in the early days of the Black lawyer may be, on a comparative basis, no less than it is today. Today, many of our black youth are be ing discouraged from entering the legal profession because the people do not see the Black lawyer in corporate law firms, as corporation counsels in the major cities of our nation, as general counsels of major and small corporations. However, Josiah T. Settle and the lawyers of the "Greenville Movement" knew that the legal profession would be slow in its willingness to ~ssimilate 7/ Ibid. -------------- ,', NBA' - 6 the Ueyro into a profession where the rule of law might be broadened to encompass the rights of racial minorities. Settle stated, Many of our friends and all of our enecies d,'scouraged us by saying that this was one , profession in Jhich we could not ho~e to succeed ••• weJirealized in the beginniny that the under, ak ing to becol,le pract ical lawyers, and tl acquire such a mastery of the law as to lnter favorably upon its practice, was a serious one and doubly so 8/ to us.- I Concerning the question of scholarship, the IIGreenville Hoveraentll concluded that IIfew men ever reach distinction in the law I ' who were not thorough scholars~·1 Said Settle, the legal profession requires more than an lIoily tongue and vivid imagination. It . 9/ require s real earne st workt II The "Greenville MovIe ment" was initiated because the partici- pants believed that the established bar associations were not con th~ cerned about the "masses ok [Black] people" yet, knew that I " [t] he bar ha s nec e ssar ily exerc i sed the w·hole j ud ic ial po\tler of 10/ this cOQntry. ,,- 8/ Id. at 51. 9/ Id. at 52. 10/ Id. at 55. ( .~. - 7' I ~ne ~ational Dar Association gre~ out of the ~Greenville· :t~ve~ent and the 1924 convention of the Iowa Colored Bar Associa- tio~. ~nile it is believed that lawyers from other states were in 11/ 12/ attendance, ~-r. Genna Rae NcNeil and others list the f0110\-lin9 , ~ t\'lelve Black Ia ...~ yers as attending organizational sessions; Chi~~ Illinois: (1) ~endell E. Green, (2) C. Francis Stradford (3) Jesse N. Baker, (4) William H. Haynes, and (5) George C. Adams. Kansas £~tYL.J!~~~ur~: (6) L. A:r\asa Knox, and (7) Charles H. Ca110\-lay. Des Moines, Iowa: (8) Gertrude E. Rush (9) Charles P. Howard, , (lO) George H. Woodson, (11) James D. Morris, and (12) S. Joe Brown. The ~ational Bar Association is a product of the mid- western values of the Black lawyer. The person given credit for or';}anizin':J the Colored or Negro gar Association" into a National 11/ S.~. Bro~n, Our Founder,'~ NBAJ 263, 264 (1944) Lawyer(s) from ~~orasKa who may have been in attendance, include Silas Robbins, the first Black lawyer in Nebraska (1889), H. J. Pinkett, Jesse Hutton, John Adams, Sr •. John A. Pagg Charles S. Davis, A B. McCall; Ray ,viII iaus E. H. Hall, and a ~1r. Green. Add i tional research i~ required in so far as the l~ebraska delegation to the 1925 meeting is concerned, I am indebted to Ms. Bertha Calloway, Director of the Black Plains Museuln in O~aha, Nebraska, for providing ne with these names as possible attendees. Ms. Calloway's reference comes from an unoublished manuscript by Attorney H. J. Pinkett, entitled, A ~i5to~ical Sketch of The Onaha Negro 41, 75 (1937). See also, f. oixon, NegroeS-of Nebraska 35 ( Urban 'League of Nebraska 1939) •. (Also oo·"f[le at the Black Plains io1useurn in Omaha, Nebraska). But see, E~ Toles, History of the ~a~i~nal Bar Association 23 (50th Anniversary Convention Program of NBA - 1975). Toles reports that the first action to form a National Bar Association was taken by ~oodson in Chicago. S. J. Brown, who was a founder of the NBA and 'present during all of the initial meetings has written that the second, not the first meeting to organize the NBA occurred in Chicago The first occurred in Des Moines, Iowa Id. at 264. 12/ See Genna Rae McNeil The National Bar Association, Incorporated, undated nanuscript pending ?ublication by Greenwood Press for inclusion in Encyclopedia of Black Anerican Voluntary Organizations. UBA- 8 Bar Association- is George II. Woodson. George H. Woodson, an 1895 law graduate of Howard Law School, was born in Wytheville, Viryinia in 1865. Upon graduation from Howard Law School, Woodson went to Iowa where he practiceo law until his death on July 7, 1933. Woodson I was the first president of the Iowa Colored Bar Association, the first president of the National Bar Association, and served as Deputy Collector of u.S. Customs for the Port of Des Moines. He became the first Black citizen of Iowa ever nominated by RepUblicans as a state representative, and served as a u.S. Commissioner to the Viryin Islands. II. The NBA: Its Purpose Founded in 1924 and incorporated in August 1925, the purpose .. of the National Bar Association was stated in the constitution as follows: The advancement of the science of jurispru prudence, and in addition to form a nation-wide oryanization of practic.irg attorneys of the Negro race in an endeavor to strengthen and elevate the Ney ro lawyer in his profe ssion ana in his relationship to his people; to improve his standing at the bar of the coun try, and to stress those values that would serve to enhance the ethics of his practice and conduct, to condemn actions that have a tendency to lessen respect for the -la\~yer and to crepte a bond of true fellowship arnony the colore<.J member s of the Ba r of America for their general uplift and advance ment and for the encourayeme.nt of the Uegro youth of America who will follow their choice of this profession.l3/ In 1925 the que st ion ra ised by some members of the liar was should the Neq':'ro la\t/yer encourage and oryanize a separate bar II , ~ ; a ssoc iat ion? Today, I ra ise th is que st ion \t/ith you at th is, the n . . first );Jlenary session of the UBA in this decade: "Should the Afro-AItler ican lawyer part ic ipate and support a bar assoc iation like the national Bar Association?" These questions loom over this con- vention, and while one could provide a ready answer of either yes or no, some analysis must first be made. 13/ R. P. Alexander, The national Bar Association--Its Aims and Purposes, 1 NATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION JOURNAL (UBAJ) I (1941). I note that the current statement of purpose of the lIDA has been raodified. The current objects of the l~BA appearing in Article II of the NBA Constitution reads as follows: The objects of the Association shall be to advance the science of jurisprudence, improve the administra tion of justice, preserve the independence of the Judiciary of our cities, states and nation; to up hold the honor and integrity of the legal profession; to promote professional and soc ial intercourse among the members of the American Bar and the International Bar; to promote legislation that will improve the economic condition of all of the citizens of the United States; to aid all citiz~ns regardless of race, sex or creed in their efforts to secure a free and untrammeled use of the franchise yuaranteed by the Constitution of the United States; to protect civil and political rights of the citizens and residents of the several states of the United States. Another version of the NDA "Constitution (Article II] and By-Laws" (~rubably adopted in the late 1940's) contains the following langu a~e: The objects of the association shall be to advance the science of juris-prudence, uphold the honor of the leg al profession, promote soc ial intercour se amoIl3 the members of the Amer ican Bar, and protect \ the civil and political riyhts of all citizens of . the several states of the united States. . ' .... ~'.~ :.'i~~ ~~-"~ .J....,....~.. ,

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Bro~n, Our Founder,'~ NBAJ 263, 264 (1944) Lawyer(s) from. ~~orasKa who may have on police brutality and the l1iami Riots of 1980. See, The
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