Who’s Who Inside the HLF Gallery (from l-r) Constance Baker Motley, Thurgood Marshall, Judge Elbert Parr Tuttle, Judge Jane Bolin, Donald Lee Hollowell, Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander, Raymond Pace Alexander, Frederick L. McGhee, James Weldon Johnson, and Derrick Alexander Pope. Inset: Charles Hamilton Houston
Episode 032: W. J. Michael “Mike” Cody: A View from the Mountaintop
On April 4, 1968, six lawyers came to the aid of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in a Federal District Court in Memphis, Tennessee. We visited W. J. Michael “Mike” Cody - one of the lawyers - in October 2019 at his law office in Memphis and he shared his remembrances of the untold legal efforts that were a big part of that fateful day.
Episode 031: James Weldon Johnson: A Legal Renaissance
This week, we shine the spotlight on James Weldon Johnson. Many know him as the author of Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing, but Johnson was also a lawyer and Executive Secretary of the NAACP.
Episode 030: Noah Parden, Part 4: The Majesty of the Law
This week, Mark Curriden completes his discussion of the 1906 saga of Ed Johnson and the lawyer Noah Parden.
Episode 029: Noah Parden, Part 3: Order In The Court
In Part 3, Mark Curriden takes us inside the United States Supreme Court as the 1906 saga of the Ed Johnson case makes its way to the nation's highest Court and how Noah Parden and Styles Hitchins made legal history.
Episode 028: Noah Parden, Part 2: A Lawyer’s Appeal
This week we continue our discussion about one of the most important and little-known cases in American history, the case of Ed Johnson, who in 1906 was falsely accused of rape in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Episode 027: Noah Parden, Part 1: Jailhouse Rock
This week Mark Curriden shares with us the compelling story of a 1906 legal drama that started with a false arrest for rape, a shameful trial that was chock full of abuse and gross injustice, and a lawyer named Noah Parden who along with the United States Supreme Court, made respect for the rule of law a gift to future generations of Americans.
Episode 026: Sadie Alexander: A Woman Like Her
In this special episode closing out our commemoration of Women's History Month, we pay tribute to Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander, one of the most accomplished lawyers of the twentieth century.
Episode 025: Jane Bolin, Lady Judge
In 1939, Jane Matilda Bolin became the first African American female judge in the nation's history. As a judge, serving forty years in the Domestic Relations Court in New York City, Judge Bolin made great strides in protecting the rights of children. In honor of Women's History Month, we highlight the outstanding career of this noteworthy legal figure.
Episode 024: Constance Baker Motley, Lady Justice (Part 3)
Of the more than 250 cases she handled while at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the James Meredith case was perhaps the most noteworthy effort by Constance Baker Motley. In this episode, we take an in-depth look at how the case started, some aspects that were unique to the case, and what Mrs. Motley felt was the long-term impact and meaning of the whole matter.
Episode 023: Constance Baker Motley, Lady Justice (Part 2)
In 1966, Constance Baker Motley became the first African American woman to be appointed as a federal judge. Joel Motley, III, Judge Motley’s son and producer of the multi-award-winning documentary, The Trials of Constance Baker Motley joins us to pay homage to this remarkable figure.
Episode 022: Constance Baker Motley, Lady Justice (Part 1)
Constance Baker Motley was one of the most important civil rights lawyers of the twentieth century. Tapped by Thurgood Marshall in 1945 to join the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, she was involved in more than 200 cases as either lead counsel or during the appeal of a case.
Episode 019: They Call Him Mr. Civil Rights; Donald Lee Hollowell (Part 2)
Donald Lee Hollowell was the one lawyer that Georgians would call on when their rights were being threatened. From his first case in 1952, all the way through his retirement in the early 90’s Hollowell’s name was synonymous with civil rights. In Part 2, his enduring legacy is discussed by veteran civil rights leader, Rev. Otis Moss, Jr.
Episode 018: They Called Him Mr. Civil Rights; Donald Lee Hollowell (Part 1)
In Part 1, the cases he handled are detailed by professor Maurice Daniels, author of Saving the Soul of Georgia: Donald L. Hollowell and the Struggle for Civil Rights.
Episode 017: Black to School; Judge William Bootle, with special guest, Professor Patrick Longon (Part 2)
Mercer University Law Professor Pat Longan joins us to reflect on the life and career of Judge William Augustus Bootle and the case that desegregated the University of Georgia.
Episode 016: Black To School, Judge William Bootle with special guest, Professor Patrick Longon (Part 1)
In 1961, the fate of the nation's oldest public institution of higher learning hung in the balance. It would be up to one federal judge to rule on the question of equality in education.
Episode 012: May I Take Your Order, with special guest, Professor Christopher Schmidt
As the Civil Rights Movement began to intensify, students all across the south staged lunch counter sit-ins. From Greensboro, North Carolina to Atlanta, Georgia lawyers aided them in their quest for justice.
Episode #011: Prelude to May I Take Your Order
Sit-ins became a prominent part of the civil rights movement in the early 1960s, with the most famous occurring in Greensboro, North Carolina. But as a form of protest, it was first used in 1939 by a lawyer named Samuel Wilbert Tucker.
Episode #009: The Back of the Bus Takes a Front Seat
Fred Grey, the lead attorney in the case Browder v. Gayle reflects on the legal efforts associated with the effort that launched Martin Luther King, Jr. to national prominence.
Episode #008: Prelude to The Back of the Bus Takes a Front Seat
The Montgomery Bus Boycott makes the nation come face-to-face with the rottenness of segregation and the Jim Crow south.
Episode # 007: Brown v. Board of Education Series, Pt. 2: In Deliberate Speed
Charles S. Johnson, III returns to talk about Brown 1 and the two arguments the lawyers made in the Supreme Court and how Brown 2 continues to shape the landscape of higher education.