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Shades Of Gray: The Life And Times Of An Antebellum Free Family Of Color, Jason A. Gillmer
Shades Of Gray: The Life And Times Of An Antebellum Free Family Of Color, Jason A. Gillmer
Jason A Gillmer
The history of race and slavery is often told from the perspective of either the oppressors or the oppressed. This Article takes a different tact, unpacking the rich and textured story of the Ashworths, an obscure yet prosperous free family of color who moved from Louisiana to Texas in the early 1830s, where they owned land, raised cattle, and bought and sold slaves. It is undoubtedly an unusual story; indeed in the history of the time there are surely more prominent names and more famous events. Yet their story reveals a tantalizing world in which—despite legal rules and conventional thinking—life …
How The Cleveland Bar Became Segregated: 1870-1930, Robert N. Strassfeld
How The Cleveland Bar Became Segregated: 1870-1930, Robert N. Strassfeld
Robert N. Strassfeld
Abstract
Paper Title: How the Cleveland Bar Became Segregated: 1900-1930
This article examines the changing perimeters of professional opportunity and the professional choices made by Cleveland’s African American lawyers in the early twentieth century. At the turn of the century, the Cleveland bar could fairly be described as racially integrated. The openness of the bar and the response of African American lawyers shaped the day-to-day professional lives of those lawyers. This openness manifested itself in a number of interracial law practices, in a client base for black lawyers that was predominantly white, in the court appointment practices of white judges, …
Debunking The Myth Of Civil Rights Liberalism: Visions Of Racial Justice In The Thought Of T. Thomas Fortune, 1880-1890 Symposium: The Lawyer's Role In A Contemporary Democracy: Promoting Social Change And Political Values, Susan D. Carle
Susan D. Carle