Thurgood Marshall’s 1967 Appointment to the Supreme Court

Justice Thurgood Marshall On August 30, 1967, the United States Senate confirmed Thurgood Marshall for the U.S. Supreme Court by a vote of 69-11. Thus, after almost 200 years, the country had its first African-American Supreme Court Justice. It would be even longer until the first woman, Sandra Day O’Connor, joined the Court in 1981.

Marshall, of course, made history in a number of ways. While on the Court, he sided with the rights of the oppressed, becoming a fighter for equal treatment of all Americans while leading on such issues as his opposition to the death penalty.

The following newsreel footage covers President Lyndon B. Johnson’s nomination of Marshall to the Court.

This short video captures some images and a few short interview excerpts from Senators involved in the nomination process. Early on, you may see New York Senator Robert F. Kennedy next to Marshall, and Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy speaks about the nomination.

Marshall’s fight for equal rights went back long before President Johnson nominated him to the Supreme Court. After becoming chief counsel at the NAACP at the young age of 32, he oversaw many important cases. He also won 29 cases before the Supreme Court, including the landmark 1954 case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, where the Court struck down “separate but equal” school segregation.

By all accounts, Marshall also was a decent man and fun to be around, as he often regaled his colleagues with stories of his experiences. I have been reading Gilbert King’s Devil in the Grove, which recounts a fascinating period where Marshall was involved in a case helping defend four black men accused of a 1949 crime in Florida.

In the following video, Mike Wallace interviews Thurgood Marshall on 60 Minutes. The video is undated, but the conversation and the reference to “President Eisenhower” (and apparently to his 1956 re-election) place it within several years after Brown. I like Marshall’s response to the question about who he voted for, as well as Wallace’s promotion of the game Jotto at the end. Check it out.

A few years back, I caught the HBO one-man show Thurgood, where Laurence Fishburne portrayed the legendary lawyer and jurist. Fishburne does a very good job of capturing various sides of Marshall and his long career, and it is worth tracking down. Here is the trailer.

Thurgood Marshall remains one of the giants of American history. Although I did not learn about him while I was in grade school or probably even high school, every school child should learn about his life.

Photo: Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States

What is your favorite story about Thurgood Marshall? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Justice Byron White on the Football Field

    Jutice Byron Whizzer White Former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron R. White was born on June 8 in 1917. White, who passed away on April 15 in 2002, has the distinction of being the only U.S. Supreme Court Justice to also have a distinguished football career.

    Justice White served on the U.S. Supreme Court from April 1962 to June 1993. In his obituary in 2002, the New York Times wrote that while White often voted with the conservative justices, such as dissenting in Miranda v. Arizona (1966) and Roe v. Wade (1973), other times he went a different direction, so on the Supreme Court “no ideological label ever fit Justice White comfortably.” Where one could label Byron White was on the football field, where he was a stellar athlete.

    byron whizzer white In college, White played football halfback for the Colorado Buffaloes of the University of Colorado at Boulder, where a newspaper columnist gave White the nickname “Whizzer.” After graduation, starting in 1938, White played in the NFL for the Pittsburgh Pirates (now the Steelers) and the Detroit Lions. He played in the NFL for three years at high pay while leading the league in rushing for two seasons before he went in the Navy during World War II.

    After returning from the war, White decided to pursue a law career, enrolling in Yale Law School and starting the trajectory that would take him to President John F. Kennedy appointing him to the U.S. Supreme Court. Although he left his football days behind, White could not escape the nickname he disliked, as people continued to call him “Whizzer.”

    A video of the game was recorded by J. Rudolph Jaeger, who became famous as an esteemed brain surgeon. The video shows White on the football field in the 1938 Cotton Bowl of Rice Institute (later Rice University) vs. Colorado University. Most of the video shows the game from a distance, but White is in the lighter colored uniform with number 24, playing halfback at a time the position featured all kinds of responsibilities like running, throwing, kicking and playing defense. Near the beginning of the video, though, the camera catches the young White in close-up preparing for the game.

    [February 2016 Update: Unfortunately, the video is no longer available on YouTube, but you may see some clips of the game on the Rice Owls website.]

    In that 1938 game, Rice ultimately won what was only the second Cotton Bowl Classic. Byron White had led the Colorado Buffaloes through an unbeaten season, and at the beginning of the Cotton Bowl, it looked like that run of wins would continue. The Buffaloes jumped off to a 14-0 lead after White caught an interception and ran 47 yards for a touchdown, which would be the longest interception run in Cotton Bowl history for 50 years. White even kicked the extra point.

    But after that score, Rice’s halfback Ernie Lain, who had come in off the bench, took control of the game, leading the Rice Owls to a 28-14 victory. No one would match Lain’s feat of throwing three touchdowns in the Cotton Bowl until Doug Flutie did it in 1985.

    Lain went on to play for the Washington Redskins and passed away in 1987 while White was serving on the Supreme Court. But on that date in 1938, without any idea of what paths their lives would take or whatever other accomplishments would come, White and Lain played like football gods.

    Today, the NFL Players Association annually presents the Byron “Whizzer” White Award, its highest honor, to recognize “players who go above and beyond to perform community service in their team cities and hometowns.”

    What is your favorite story of a changed career? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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