Kensi Gounden – The True Story Behind “Thurgood Marshall”
Kensi Gounden writing the biography of famous American lawyer Thurgood Marshall, originally Thorough good Marshall, (born July 2, 1908, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.—died January 24, 1993, Bethesda), lawyer, civil rights activist, and associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, the Court’s first African American member. As an attorney, he successfully argued before the Court the case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, which declared unconstitutional racial segregation in American public schools.
Marshall was the son of William Canfield Marshall, a railroad
porter and a steward at an all-white country club, and Norma Williams Marshall,
an elementary school teacher. He graduated with honor’s from Lincoln University
(Pennsylvania) in 1930. After being rejected by the University of Maryland Law
School because he was not white, Marshall attended Howard University Law
School; he received his degree in 1933, ranking first in his class. At Howard
he was the protégé of Charles Hamilton Houston, who encouraged Marshall and
other law students to view the law as a vehicle for social change.
During Marshall’s tenure on the Supreme Court, he was a
steadfast liberal, stressing the need for equitable and just treatment of the
country’s minorities by the state and federal governments. A pragmatic judicial
activist, he was committed to making the U.S. Constitution work; most illustrative
of his approach was his attempt to fashion a “sliding scale” interpretation of
the equal protection clause that would weigh the objectives of the government
against the nature and interests of the groups affected by the law. Marshall’s
sliding scale was never adopted by the Supreme Court, though in several major
civil rights cases of the 1970s the Court echoed Marshall’s views. He was also
adamantly opposed to capital punishment and generally favored the rights of the
national government over the rights of the states.
Marshall served on the Supreme Court as it underwent a period
of major ideological change. In his early years on the bench, he fit
comfortably among a liberal majority under the leadership of Chief Justice Earl
Warren. As the years passed, however, many of his closest allies, including
Warren, either retired or died in office, creating opportunities for Republican
presidents to swing the pendulum of activism in a conservative direction. By
the time he retired in 1991, he was known as “the Great Dissenter,” one of the
last remaining liberal members of a Supreme Court dominated by a conservative
majority.
Citations:
https://www.history.com
https://en.wikipedia.org/
https://www.britannica.com/
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