Profile -- Week 3
Judge A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr. (1928-1998)
A jurist, a legal scholar, a civil rights activist,
and a professor, Judge Leon Higginbotham remained an outspoken advocate for the voiceless
throughout his life.
Aloysius Leon Higginbotham, Jr. was born on February 25, 1928, in segregated Trenton,
New Jersey. The son of a cleaning lady and a laborer, Higginbotham grew up in a home that
only had two books, a dictionary and the Bible.
In 1944, Higginbotham was determined to study engineering, even though admission was
closed to African Americans at most universities. He was able to enroll at Purdue
University in Indiana, but soon learned that African American students were not allowed to
stay in the dormitories. He slept in an unheated attic room at the campus's International
House where snow would come through the rafters. After a year at Purdue, he suggested to
the president of the university that blacks should be allowed to stay in the dormitory and
was told, Higginbotham, you take it or leave it. The law doesnt require us to
have blacks in the dormitory.
Soon afterwards, another incident would become a catalyst for his decision to leave
Purdue. As he traveled with his debate team to Northwestern University in Chicago, the
college sophomore would find himself face to face with discrimination once again.
I was fortunate enough to make the Big Ten Debate, Higginbotham recalled in
a 1976 interview. When we went into the hotel to register, all of my classmates
registered and when it was time for me to sign up the manager came over rather abruptly
and said, Look, he cant stay here.
Higginbotham then recalled that the coach, who had always told the team to speak with
conviction, suddenly became mild mannered and said, Well, where is the closest
colored YMCA? As a result, Higginbotham stayed in a rat-infested colored
YMCA while his teammates slept at the hotel. He soon resolved to leave Purdue and to
switch to law so that he could work for social change.
Higginbotham transferred to Antioch College, where he met another new student, Coretta
Scott who would later marry Martin Luther King, Jr. After receiving his B.A. from Antioch
in 1949, he went to Yale Law School, earning an LL.B. in 1952.
He worked in Philadelphia for two years as an assistant district attorney and then
joined a local law firm. He also served as president of the local branch of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP.) By 1956, he had become special
deputy attorney general for Pennsylvania.
In 1962, President John F. Kennedy named Higginbotham to head the Federal Trade
Commission, making him the FTC's first black commissioner and its youngest as well. In
1964, he was appointed by President Lyndon Johnson to serve on the U.S. District Court for
the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the youngest African American to serve as a federal
judge. In 1977, President Jimmy Carter appointed Higginbotham to serve on the U.S.
Third-Circuit Court of Appeals, where he would become chief judge of the court in 1989.
After serving as a federal judge for 29 years, Higginbotham retired in 1993 and soon
became an outspoken critic of conservative social policies and the U.S. Supreme Court
justices that supported them. He devoted himself to working on four social issues: racial
and gender equality, religious tolerance, the eradication of poverty, and the protection
of children.
Over the years, U.S. Chief Justices Earl Warren, Warren Earl Burger, and William
Rehnquist appointed Higginbotham to various Judicial Conference committees and related
responsibilities. In 1969, as Yale's first black trustee, Higginbotham encouraged the
school to admit female students for the first time. After retiring from the court in 1993
he served as counsel to the Congressional Black Caucus for several voting-rights cases
heard before the U.S. Supreme Court. In 1994, at the request of South African leader
Nelson Mandela, Higginbotham became an international mediator for issues surrounding the
first national elections in which all South Africans could participate. His many awards
included the nation's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom (1995),
the NAACPs Spingarn Medal (1996), and the Roger Baldwin Award of the American Civil
Liberties Union (1998).
In addition to teaching at Harvard, where his wife was a professor of history and
Afro-American studies, Higginbotham taught at the law schools of the University of
Michigan, New York University, the University of Pennsylvania, Stanford, and Yale. With
his six foot, five inch frame and a booming baritone voice, he was well known for his
passionate teaching and much loved by his students.
"He was not only a mentor but a father figure for me and for a generation of young
law professors and lawyers, explained Charles Ogletree, a member of the Harvard Law
School faculty who studied under Higginbotham. He was the epitome of the peoples'
lawyer. Despite his individual merits and accomplishments, he never hesitated to lend a
hand to the poor, the voiceless, the powerless. and the downtrodden."
As an author, Higginbotham is best known for a widely acclaimed multi-volume series on
race and the American legal process, including In the Matter of Color: The Colonial
Period (1978) and Shades of Freedom: Racial Politics and Presumptions of the
American Legal Process (1996.) Higginbotham was working on the third and fourth
volumes of his series when he died on December 14, 1998.
Just one month earlier, he had traveled to Washington, D.C. to urge the U.S. House of
Representatives Judiciary Committee not to impeach President William Clinton. There
are grave systemic dangers in resorting to impeachment except in the most extreme
cases," he testified, adding that President Clinton's alleged perjury regarding
consensual sexual relations "does not rise to the level of Treason, Bribery, or
other high Crimes and Misdemeanors' about which the framers were concerned when they
drafted Article II of the U.S. Constitution."
At various memorial services, held in Boston, New York, D.C., and Philadelphia,
political leaders and scholars praised his lifelong devotion to the cause of civil rights.
"In losing Leon Higginbotham, we have lost a giant oak, and we are left with an
enormous gap in the landscape of the nation," said Neil L. Rudenstine, Harvard
University president. Harvard Law School Dean Robert C. Clark hailed him as "a
brilliant jurist and dedicated teacher who did much to educate students about race and
law, not only through his classroom discussions and legal publications but also by
personal example."
But one of the most moving tributes came from a former law clerk who went on to become
Philadelphias City Solicitor. Stephanie L. Franklin-Suber recalled that she was a
24-year-old third-year law student when she suffered a stroke in December, 1981, two
months after her mother died.
I was in intensive care with an oxygen tent over me, she said at the
memorial service in Philadelphia. Someone brought a telephone to my bed. It was
Judge Higginbotham calling. To me, it was God calling. Judge Higginbotham offered me
encouragement and inspiration. That call was the turning point of my life.
According to Higginbothams widow, Evelyn, the one thing [in the memorial
service] that really captured my husbands compassion was what Stephanie
Franklin-Suber said. He reached out to her when she was down. She got well and she went on
to become a strong lawyer. That was typical of his life.
Sources:
Higginbotham, F. Michael. Saving the Dream for All: A Tribute to A. Leon
Higginbotham, Human Rights, Summer 1999, American Bar Association.
Transcript, A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr. Oral History, Interview I, 10/7/76 by Joe B.
Frantz, LBJ Library, Internet Copy at www.lbjlib.utexas.edu
www.law.harvard.edu
Africana website, www.africana.com
Permission to use the above image of Judge A. Leon Higginbotham was granted by Evelyn
Higginbotham.
Next week: (Week 4)
Which African-American female heads the nation's foremost civil rights organization
working for equal rights under the law?
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