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James Nabrit, Jr.


James Madison Nabrit Jr. (1900–1997) was a prominent civil rights attorney who won several important arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court, served as president of Howard University for much of the 1960s, and was appointed Deputy Ambassador to the United Nations by President Lyndon B. Johnson. His brother, Samuel M. Nabrit, was appointed to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. His son, James Nabrit III, is also a civil rights attorney.

James Nabrit Jr. was born in Georgia on September 7, 1900 to James Nabrit, Sr., a Baptist minister and baker, and Gertrude Augusta West. He graduated from Morehouse College in 1923 and from Northwestern University Law School in 1927. Nabrit married Norma Walton in 1924—they would remain married until her death in 1988—and taught at colleges in Louisiana and Arkansas from 1927 to 1930. From 1930 to 1936 he practiced law in Houston, Texas. Nabrit began teaching law at Howard University in 1936 and served as dean of the law school from 1958 to 1960 and president of the university from 1960 to 1969. In 1938 he started the first formal civil rights law course in the United States.

Beginning in the 1940s and through the 1950s, Nabrit handled a number of civil rights cases for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, working with prominent attorneys such as Thurgood Marshall, later a Supreme Court justice. Notably, Nabrit argued Bolling v. Sharpe, a companion case of Brown v. Board of Education.

Reverend James M. Nabrit, Sr., a son of former slaves, became President of the American Baptist Institute in Nashville, and Secretary of the National Baptist Convention. Himself a learned college graduate, who taught some of his children Latin, Greek and Physics, James M. Nabrit, Sr. was the father of eight college graduates, and seven who earned advanced degrees. His son Samuel M. Nabrit, a marine biologist, became President of Texas Southern University and a member of the United States Atomic Energy Commission.


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