Earl B. Dickerson

Earl B. Dickerson (1891–1986) was a prominent African American attorney, community activist and business executive who successfully argued before the U. S. Supreme Court in Hansberry v. Lee.[1]

Earl B. Dickerson
Earl B. Dickerson while a member of the President's Committee on Fair Employment Practices
Born(1891-06-22)June 22, 1891
DiedSeptember 1, 1986(1986-09-01) (aged 95)
Chicago, Illinois
Alma mater University of Illinois
University of Chicago Law School
OccupationAttorney
businessman
Political partyDemocratic

Early life

Earl Burrus Dickerson was born on June 22, 1891 in Canton, Mississippi, the son of Edward and Emma Garrett Fielding Dickerson. His maternal grandfather, Benjamin Franklin Garrett, was born a slave and, before the Civil War ended, purchased himself and his wife, Eliza Montgomery, out of slavery. Earl's father died in 1896 and Earl was raised by his mother, his mother's mother, Eliza, and a half-sister from his father's first marriage, Gertrude.[2]

Dickerson first moved to Chicago in 1907 and spent most of the next 10 years there, graduating from a University of Chicago-sponsored prep school in 1909. He married Inez Moss in 1912 (a marriage which ended in divorce in 1927)[2] and earned a BA from the University of Illinois in 1914. During his time spent studying at the University of Illinois, Dickerson helped establish the Beta chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity.[2][3]

Dickerson's legal studies were interrupted by World War I when he enlisted in the U. S. Army. He became a lieutenant and served in the American Expeditionary Forces in France. After the conclusion of the war, Dickerson became a founding member of the American Legion and personally organized the George L. Giles Post 87 in Chicago. Returning to the University of Chicago, Dickerson completed his legal studies in 1920, becoming one of the first African Americans to graduate from the Law School.[1][3] The University of Chicago Black Law Students Association is named in his honor.[4]

Law career

In 1921, Dickerson accepted a position as general counsel of the newly formed Supreme Life Insurance Company, which later became the largest African American owned insurance company in the North. This was not his first association with the company. In 1919, while still a law student, he had helped draft the company's articles of incorporation. While working for Supreme Life Insurance, Dickerson also started a law firm with fellow law school graduate Wendell E. Green, who later became a Circuit Court judge. At the same time, Dickerson began to take an active role in politics and civil rights.[1][3]

In 1927, Dickerson was instrumental in establishing Burr Oak Cemetery, one of the few African American cemeteries in southwestern Cook County. Later, during the Great Depression, Dickerson helped persuade Supreme Life to step in and save the cemetery after Burr Oak defaulted on its mortgage.[5] On June 15. 1930 he married Kathryn Kennedy Wilson.[6]

Dickerson was known as "the dean of Chicago’s Black lawyers," and in 1933 became the first African American appointed as Illinois Assistant Attorney General under Governor Henry Horner. Dickerson served in that role until 1939.[7]

In 1939, he became the first African American Democrat to serve on the Chicago City Council. The following year he successfully argued before the U. S. Supreme Court in the landmark Hansberry v. Lee case, which addressed the issue of restrictive covenants. It involved the Chicago home purchased by real estate broker Carl Augustus Hansberry, father of playwright Lorraine Hansberry, with money borrowed from the Supreme Life Insurance Company.[1][3]

In 1947 Dickerson was elected President of the National Bar Association, an organization that included most of the approximately 1,500 black lawyers then practicing in the United States.[8]

Distinctions

In 1952, Dickerson became president of Supreme Life Insurance Company.[1] Other positions Dickerson held during his lifetime include head of the National Bar Association, board member of the national NAACP, grand polemarch of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, president of the Chicago Urban League, and president of the National Lawyers Guild.[1][9] When Dickerson was elected president of the National Lawyers Guild from 1951 to 1954, he became the first African American president of an integrated Bar association.[9]

He died in his Chicago home on September 1, 1986[3] and was buried next to his wife Kathryn in Burr Oak, the cemetery he helped found.

References

  1. Fuller, Hoyt W. (December 1961). Johnson, John H. (ed.). "Earl B. Dickerson:warrior and statesman". Ebony. Chicago, Illinois: Johnson Publishing Company, Inc. 17 (2): 150–154.
  2. Dingwall, Christopher; Rachel Watson "Guide to the Earl B. Dickerson Papers", Chicago Public Library, Mapping the Stacks. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
  3. Johnson, John H., ed. (September 22, 1986). "Earl B. Dickerson, 95, dies, lawyer/businessman". Jet. Chicago, Illinois. 71 (1): 12–13..
  4. http://uchicagoblsa.weebly.com/history.html
  5. Blakely, Robert J.; Marcus Shepard (2006) Earl B. Dickerson: A Voice for Freedom and Equality. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press, 2006, pp. 54–56.
  6. Blakely and Shepard, pp. 44.
  7. Jack Salzman, David Lionel Smith, Cornel West; Encyclopedia of African American Culture and History, 1996, pp.175
  8. Jack Salzman, David Lionel Smith, Cornel West; Encyclopedia of African American Culture and History, 1996, pp.175
  9. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on March 6, 2012. Retrieved February 20, 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Further reading

  • Blakely, Robert J. (with Marcus Shepard). Earl B. Dickerson: A Voice for Freedom and Equality. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press, 2006.
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