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Authors: Juan Williams

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Marshall’s prominence made him a name even in white America.
Collier
’s, then one of the nation’s top white magazines, identified him as “Our Greatest Civil Liberties Lawyer.” In a nod to his busy social life, the magazine noted: “He’s equally at home on a dance floor or before the U.S. Supreme Court.”

The magazine featured Marshall’s successful challenges to segregation in graduate schools but went a step further by portraying him as a hero to the common black man because of his ability to break racism’s grip. As an example,
Collier
’s told of Marshall being called late one night while he was playing poker in a Washington, D.C., hotel. Over the phone he heard that a lynching was about to take place in the South. Marshall called the FBI and the White House but was told they could not get help to the man before the next day.

“He then performed an instantaneous, cerebral tour-de-force,” the magazine wrote. “He put through a long-distance call to an influential southern lawyer representing strong anti-Negro factions. When he had the man on the phone he said, ‘Look, just two sets of people can’t afford a lynching at this time—us Negroes and you people. You are right in the midst of a Dixiecrat political campaign and a lynching is going to make your people look awful bad.’ The man’s answer was ‘Check. Give me the details and get off the phone so I can get moving. Call you back in half an hour.’ In twenty minutes, Marshall’s telephone rang and he was told, ‘The state troopers made it in time—call this number in a few minutes
and your man will be there unharmed.’ And he was, although he was still too shaken to talk.”

The article celebrated Marshall as a “tall, burly, gregarious man, light-skinned and light-hearted.… He has consciously chosen to follow a hedonistic, non-worrying philosophy.” Marshall offered his motto for life in the story: “I intend to wear life like a very loose garment, and never worry about nothin’.”

Aunt Medi was featured as the special woman in Marshall’s life, the one who told funny stories about his long nights playing cards and his inability to carry a tune. Buster was quoted just once. At the very end of the article, she said he worked constantly. “He’s aged so in the past five years,” she said. “His disposition has changed. He is nervous where he used to be calm. This work is taking its toll on him. You know, it’s a discouraging job he’s set [for] himself.”
12

Despite his hectic life on the road and his troubles at home, his celebrity created new opportunities for Marshall. His private ambition had long been to become a judge, and by the early 1950s newspaper stories floated Marshall’s name again as a candidate for a federal judgeship.
Collier
’s magazine made public for the first time his effort to land a federal judgeship a few years earlier. The magazine’s sources said Marshall didn’t get the job because he would not join hands with politically influential blacks in Tammany Hall.

Marshall told the magazine that the anonymous source was right. He had refused even to meet with Tammany Hall’s black regulars because, he said, “in my book a federal judge is a different animal—he shouldn’t have to play patty-cake with the club house boys.”
13
Marshall wanted to be a judge but only on his terms. The willful lawyer was not above using the magazine to remind people that he was qualified to be a judge and didn’t have any political dirt on his hands.

He succeeded in getting his message out. The
Collier
’s article stirred a new round of talk, as well as several more newspaper stories, connecting Marshall to the possibility of a federal judgeship. There were two vacant seats, in Philadelphia and New York. Marshall offered no comment to reporters about the judgeships except to say, “I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it.”
14

Even with support from the press, Marshall still did not have the blessings of local black political powers in New York. The open judgeships went to white lawyers.

But even as half of his soul was pulling him toward the federal bench, the other half of Marshall saw his most important work as the unfinished business of ending school segregation. It was the work that Charles Houston had told him from his first day in law school would revolutionize American race relations. The question now was whether Thurgood Marshall could find a winning way to lead a twentieth-century American revolution.

CHAPTER 20
Planning a Revolt

E
ND OF
J
IM
C
ROW IN
S
IGHT
screamed the
Afro-American
’s banner headline announcing the Supreme Court’s June 1950 decision in
Sweatt
. Thurgood Marshall triumphantly predicted: “The complete destruction of
all
enforced segregation is now in sight.… Segregation no longer has the stamp of legality in any public education.”
1

Marshall was full of excitement and anticipation when he called a conference of attorneys from across the country to meet in New York. He was looking for a way to make the leap from desegregating graduate-level schools to integrating all public schools. The meeting attracted wide attention. Black newspapers covered it, and so did
The New York Times
. Jimmy Hicks of the
Afro-American
quoted Marshall as saying that the lawyers had mapped out plans to “wipe out … all phases of segregation in education from professional school to kindergarten.” Hicks also reported a new defiant tone to the lawyers’ discussion.

The militant attitude in public statements from Marshall and the lawyers, however, was quite different from their private discussions. Marshall was still deeply concerned that a direct attack on all school segregation could be time-consuming and, even worse, ultimately lead to defeat. Integrating law schools, professional schools, and even colleges with adult students might not have been hard. But racial integration of boys and girls in grade schools, Marshall suspected, was going to provoke the strongest possible backlash.

At the New York meeting the voice most strongly pressing for the
direct attack belonged to Spottswood Robinson. The Richmond lawyer, revered for his photographic memory and precise legal writing, wanted the NAACP to be more aggressive. When they sat down at the meeting, Marshall began by expressing doubts about a strategy of asking the courts to rule that segregation was unconstitutional. This eventually goaded the gentlemanly Robinson into forcefully making the case for a direct attack. It also gave Marshall a chance to listen to the best arguments Robinson and the other lawyers could make for a court to disregard the
Plessy
decision and declare school segregation unconstitutional.

“I did not mention this to Thurgood, the plan for a direct attack before the meeting,” Robinson said many years later in an interview, calmly smoking a pipe. “I didn’t want any roadblocks. Thurgood was always cautious in the beginning of any of these cases, no matter how good they might look. We finally recommended that the NAACP go after segregation directly. Well, that was a bombshell, and it set up all kinds of commotion.”
2

Other than smoking his cigarette and sometimes smiling, Marshall kept quiet as Robinson led the discussion of the new strategy. It was typical Marshall to let the arguments rage while he soaked in all sides to the debate. He would glare at times, sometimes throw in a biting comment or shout out “bullshit.” But slowly Marshall became more animated. He began smiling and nodding along with the talk of a direct challenge.

Robinson’s argument for a strong attack got its most vigorous support from Marshall’s deputy, Robert Carter. Known for his attention to detail and for keeping his bow tie knotted tight even while spending late hours at the office, Carter brought up a case from California,
Mendez v. Westminster School District
.

It was “sort of a dry run” for the theory of challenging segregation directly. The case involved segregation of Mexican children “on the theory that they couldn’t speak the language.” Carter noted the NAACP had prepared an amicus, or friend of the court, brief in that case, which argued for the first time that segregation for any reason was wrong.
3

The NAACP position won out when the federal courts ruled in 1946 that, under the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, California schools “must be open to all children by unified school association regardless of lineage.” NAACP lawyers were particularly struck by the idea that the judges had noted they were not ruling that school facilities for the Spanish-speaking children were unequal. Instead the judges
ordered school integration because segregation created “antagonisms [among] the children and sugges[ted] inferiority among them where none exist[ed].’ ”
4

Carter told the lawyers at the meeting that the
Mendez
ruling had great significance in the aftermath of
Sweatt
, which had nailed down the idea that no Jim Crow school could ever equal the prestige and social status of a long-standing state school.
Mendez
had bolstered the argument that school segregation always increased racial tensions and problems for minorities. The NAACP lawyers now saw the outline of their argument and a strategy to challenge all school segregation.

Then Carter made a more radical suggestion. He recommended that the lawyers begin to use a controversial sociological method to show the damage segregation did to black Americans. “Bob gets all the credit for it,” Marshall later told an oral history interviewer about the proposal to use Kenneth Clark, a black psychologist from City College of New York, as an expert.
5
Clark and his wife, Mamie, had conducted tests on black children using black and white dolls. The results were powerfully emotional. When black children were presented with black and white dolls, they almost always said the white dolls were prettier, smarter, and better at everything they did.

“I remember one young man,” Clark recounted. “I’ve never forgotten him, in Arkansas, when I asked [which doll he liked], he pointed to the white doll. And I asked him which one don’t you like, and he pointed to the brown-skinned doll. He was brown-skinned. And he said, ‘That’s a nigger, I’m a nigger,’ and he laughed. I don’t know what the laughter meant.”

In the northern states Clark similarly found that black children had negative views of themselves. “I remember one young girl, about six or seven, who cried,” he recalled. When the girl realized that she preferred white dolls, “she sort of walked out of the testing room because she did not like the fact that she was rejecting herself.”
6

When Carter presented the idea of using Clark’s research to the lawyers at the NAACP, there was little support. Spott Robinson, for example, thought it was crazy and insulting to try to persuade a court of law with examples of crying children and their dolls. But Marshall, in a surprise to his colleagues, sided with Carter. He stood up and said if the time was coming for a direct challenge to segregation, then there was no reason not to use sociology, psychology, or anything else if it might help to win the case.

* * *

The first hurdle for the NAACP remained finding a plaintiff. Black parents nationwide, but especially in the Deep South, were understandably reluctant to get involved in segregation suits. They expected a white backlash would get everyone involved fired from their jobs. Their children might be attacked by white bullies on the streets. A. P. Tureaud, the NAACP’s lawyer in New Orleans, explained in a 1950 letter that his efforts to get a suit started against all-white public schools in Louisiana failed because he could not find one parent willing to challenge local segregation laws.
7

While most black parents were fearful, a few in Kansas contacted the national NAACP office in the late forties to say they would be willing to put their names on a suit challenging the constitutionality of Jim Crow schools. Isabel Lurie, of the Topeka NAACP, told the New York office that black schools in Topeka were just about equal to the white schools. But she wanted black children to be able to attend the nearest school on an integrated basis.
8
Similar requests were coming in from other Kansas towns, such as Wichita and Merriam. And in Virginia and the Carolinas there had been NAACP chapters willing to begin work on desegregation suits.

Before the
Sweatt
decision Marshall had considered it a waste of time and money to attack segregation in elementary and secondary schools. But now, after the Supreme Court ruling in
Sweatt
and with the NAACP lawyers anxious to test a direct-attack strategy, he was aggressively looking for the right place to take the big gamble. As luck would have it, he found a school segregation case in South Carolina, where he personally had a long history with the federal judges and good support from the local NAACP.

Marshall first came to the state in the early 1940s. He had won an equal pay case for black teachers in the state in 1944. He had also come there in 1947, in the aftermath of his victory ending the Texas white primary system, to argue successfully for an end to a similar all-white primary system in South Carolina. And in 1949 Marshall had visited the state capital to discuss with local NAACP officials a possible suit to integrate South Carolina’s elementary schools.

BOOK: Thurgood Marshall
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