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Marvin S. Arrington, Sr.


Marvin Stephens Arrington, Sr. (born February 10, 1941) is an American judge in the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia and a former politician in the city of Atlanta. Elected to the Atlanta Board of Aldermen in 1969 (a precursor to the present-day City Council), he served as President of the Atlanta City Council for 17 years until his unsuccessful bid for mayor in 1997. Arrington was one of the first two black students to undertake full-time studies at the Emory University School of Law in 1965. He presently serves on the Emory Board of Trustees.

Arrington was born in Grady Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia and has resided in Atlanta all his life. His father, George Arrington, was a truck driver and his mother, Maggie, was employed as a domestic worker. He grew up in the Grady Homes public housing project in downtown Atlanta.

Arrington graduated from Henry McNeal Turner High School in 1959 and went on to attend Clark College (now Clark Atlanta University) on a football scholarship. He graduated from Clark in 1963 with a bachelor of arts degree in sociology and was a member of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity. In 1964, he began his legal studies at Howard University, but transferred to Emory University School of Law after his first year. He graduated with his juris doctor degree from Emory in 1967.

From 1969 Arrington was for 25 years on the Atlanta Board of Aldermen (later Atlanta City Council), including 7 years as president.

In 1973, Arrington joined Kleiner and Herman, later with other Kleiner and Herman partners formed Arrington, Winter, Krischer and Goger.

In 1989 Arrington and Donald Hollowell formed Arrington and Hollowell, specializing in corporate bonds, labor relations, litigation and worker's compensation.

In 1997 he ran, unsuccessfully, for mayor, against incumbent Bill Campbell.


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