Yes, if you mean Thurgood Marshall. President Johnson appointed Justice Thurgood Marshall to the US Supreme Court in 1967. He served until his retirement in 1993, when he was succeeded by Justice Clarence Thomas, the second African-American on the Court. Justice Thomas is currently an incumbent on the Court.
President Lydon B. Johnson appoint Thurgood Marshall to be the first African-American US Supreme Court justice in 1967. Marshall retired from the Court just before the beginning of the 1991 Term and was succeeded by the second African-American justice, Clarence Thomas. Thomas is still an active member of the Court.
yes he was
he was in fact the first African American male to serve on the supreme court.
Although Justice Thurgood Marshall was the first African-American to sit on the US Supreme Court, President Johnson appointed him in 1967, not 1964.
Thurgood Marshall, U.S. Supreme Court Judge / Jurist / Civil Rights Figure / black / African-American
Malcolm X had a strong animosity to the famous Federal Judge Thurgood Marshall. Malcolm X had a long memory and recalled the words of Marshall when he was the chief attorney for the NAACP. In that capacity, Marshall referred to Black Muslims as a group run by a bunch of former prison thugs and Marshall believed the Nation of Islam was financed by an Arab group. This is a paraphrase from the writings of Malcolm X.
Thurgood's cases were mostly about ending segregation in the southern states. He won most of them and ended segregation in 6 different states. And later was appointed the US Solisitor. Later in his lfie he became the first African-American to be appointed as a judge on the Supreme Court.
Thurgood Marshall
The voting rights case, Right of Negroes to Vote in Democratic Primaries, was upheld by Waring's Decision. There was a headling of the Charleston Evening Post published June 12th in 1947. The case began without any thought of integration. Rather, the intent was to make the state of South Carolina provide equal educational opportunity for black children. But when the plaintiffs, led by NAACP Legal Defense Fund lawyer Thurgood Marshall, went before the district courts in Charleston, Judge J. Waites Waring responded by saying, "You are wasting my time - you've got the laws on the book which give you separate but equal, but as long as you have separate, you never will have equality. So go back and amend your case and come back and challenge segregation itself." On Judge Waring's advice, Thurgood Marshall changed tactics. Briggs v. Elliott was heard by a panel of three federal judges in Charleston, South Carolina, who ruled against them; however, Judge Waring's s' dissent formed the legal foundation for the Supreme Court in the Brown decision.
Thurgood Marshall, U.S. Supreme Court Judge / Jurist / Civil Rights Figure / black / African-American
The first African-American justice on the Supreme Courtwas Thurgood Marshall. He was the 96th judge appointed to the Supreme Court, and was in office from October 2, 1967 until October 1, 1991.
Thurgood Marshall
Thurgood Marshall was the first African American judge to hold a position within the United States Supreme Court. His hobbies were poetry and music.
President Lyndon Johnson appointed Thurgood Marshall to the US Supreme Court in 1967. That was his first judicial position.
Thurgood Marshall was a justice on the Supreme Court of the United States. He was the first African- American ever to be appointed as a justice.
he was a judge for the supreme court in separate but equal.
Thurgood Marshall was a lawyer, civil rights activist and a Supreme Court Judge. While there are many books about him and his early years no mention what his favorite books were.
Malcolm X had a strong animosity to the famous Federal Judge Thurgood Marshall. Malcolm X had a long memory and recalled the words of Marshall when he was the chief attorney for the NAACP. In that capacity, Marshall referred to Black Muslims as a group run by a bunch of former prison thugs and Marshall believed the Nation of Islam was financed by an Arab group. This is a paraphrase from the writings of Malcolm X.
No! But he was a great justice for the liberal cause.....
Before becoming a judge he was a lawyer. He was married twice.whats 2+400
The first African American judge of the US Supreme Court. He is remembered especially for winning the 1954 case before the Supreme Court which ended segregation in public schools.