Soul of the Court : The Trailblazing Life of Judge William Benson Bryant Sr.

Tonya Bolden
University Press of Mississippi

Legal legend Judge Louis F. Oberdorfer once stated that there were “only two people in the world who really understood the Constitution” and its impact on American lives. One was Hugo Black, deceased Supreme Court justice. The other was William Benson Bryant Sr. (1911–2005), who in the early 1950s became the first Black assistant US attorney to try cases in Washington, DC’s federal court, and became that same court’s first Black chief judge in 1977.

Read more at University Press of Mississippi

Previous
Previous

No More Peace: Abolition War and Counterrevolution

Next
Next

Home Front Battles: World War II Mobilization and Race in the Deep South