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{{Short description|US Supreme Court justice from 1967 to 1991}}
{{Expand|date=January 2007}}
{{Other uses}}

{{Good article}}
{{Infobox US Associate Justice|image name=Thurgood-marshall-2.jpg
{{Pp-semi-indef}}
| name=Thurgood Marshall
{{Use American English|date=May 2019}}
| order=
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2024}}
| term start=], ]
{{Infobox officeholder
| term end= ], ]
|image = Thurgood-marshall-2.jpg
| predecessor=]
|caption = Official portrait, 1976
| successor=]
|office = ]
| denominator of bras=]
|term_start = October 2, 1967
| date of birth=], ]
|term_end = October 1, 1991
| place of birth=], ]
|appointer = ]
| date of death=], ]
|predecessor = ]
| place of death=], ]
|successor = ]
|order1 = 32nd
|office1 = Solicitor General of the United States
|term_start1 = August 23, 1965
|term_end1 = August 30, 1967
|president1 = Lyndon B. Johnson
|predecessor1 = ]
|successor1 = ]
|office2 = Judge of the ]
|term_start2 = October 5, 1961
|term_end2 = August 23, 1965
|appointer2 = ]
|predecessor2 = ''Seat established''
|successor2 = ]
|office3 = President of the ]
|term_start3 = February 12, 1940
|term_end3 = October 5, 1961
|predecessor3 = ''Position established''
|successor3 = ]
|birth_name = Thoroughgood Marshall
|birth_date = {{birth date|1908|7|2}}
|birth_place = ], Maryland, U.S.
|death_date = {{death date and age|1993|1|24|1908|7|2}}
|death_place = ], U.S.
|resting_place = ]
|party = ]
|spouse = {{ubl|{{marriage|]|September 4, 1929|February 11, 1955|end=died}}|{{marriage|]|December 17, 1955}}}}
|children = {{hlist|]|]}}
|alma_mater = {{ubl|] (])|] (])}}
|occupation = {{hlist|Civil rights lawyer|jurist}}
|known_for = First African-American Supreme Court justice
|module = {{Listen|pos=center|embed=yes|filename=Thurgood Marshall delivers the opinion of the Court in Bounds v. Smith.ogg|title=Thurgood Marshall's voice|type=speech|description=Thurgood Marshall delivers the opinion of the Court in '']''<br>Recorded April 27, 1977}}
}} }}
{{Liberalism US|jurists}}
'''Thurgood Marshall''' (], ] – ], ]) was an ] ] and the first ] to serve on the ].


'''Thoroughgood''' "'''Thurgood'''" '''Marshall''' (July 2, 1908&nbsp;– January 24, 1993) was an American civil rights lawyer and jurist who served as an ] from 1967 until 1991. He was the Supreme Court's first ] justice. Prior to his judicial service, he was an attorney who fought for civil rights, leading the ]. Marshall was a prominent figure in the movement to end ] in American public schools. He won 29 of the 32 civil rights cases he argued before the Supreme Court, culminating in the Court's landmark 1954 decision in '']'', which rejected the ] and held segregation in public education to be unconstitutional. President ] appointed Marshall to the Supreme Court in 1967. A staunch liberal, he frequently dissented as the Court became increasingly conservative.
Marshal was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on July 2, 1908. His original name was '''Thoroughgood''' but he shortened it to '''Thurgood''' in second grade. His father, William Marshall, instilled in him an appreciation for the ] and the rule of law. Additionally, as a child, he was punished for his school misbehavior by being forced to read the Constitution, which he later said piqued his interest in the document. Marshall was the grandson of a slave.


Born in ], Maryland, Marshall attended ] and the ]. At Howard, he was mentored by ], who taught his students to be "social engineers" willing to use the law to fight for civil rights. Marshall opened a law practice in Baltimore but soon joined Houston at the ] in New York. They worked together on the segregation case of '']''; after Houston returned to Washington, Marshall took his place as special counsel of the NAACP, and he became director-counsel of the newly formed NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. He participated in numerous landmark Supreme Court cases involving civil rights, including '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', ''Brown'', and '']''. His approach to desegregation cases emphasized the use of sociological data to show that segregation was inherently unequal.
Marshall was married twice; to ] from 1929 until her death from cancer in February 1955 and to ] from December 1955 until his own death in 1993. He had two sons from his second marriage ; ], a former top aide to President ], and ], who is a former ] Director, and since 2002 has served as ] Secretary of Public Safety under Governors ] and ].


In 1961, President ] appointed Marshall to the ], where he favored a broad interpretation of constitutional protections. Four years later, Johnson appointed him as the ]. In 1967, Johnson nominated Marshall to replace Justice ] on the Supreme Court; despite opposition from ], he was confirmed by a vote of 69 to 11. He was often in the majority during the consistently liberal ] period, but after appointments by President ] made the Court more conservative, Marshall frequently found himself in dissent. His closest ally on the Court was Justice ], and the two voted the same way in most cases.
==Education==
Marshall graduated from ] in ]. Afterward, Marshall wanted to apply to his hometown law school at the ], but the dean told him that he shouldn't bother because he would not be accepted due to the school's ] policy. Later, as a civil rights litigator, he successfully sued the school for this policy in the case of '']''. Instead, Marshall sought admission and was accepted at ]. He was influenced by its dynamic new dean, ], who instilled in his students the desire to apply the tenets of the Constitution to all Americans.


Marshall's jurisprudence was pragmatic and drew on his real-world experience. His most influential contribution to constitutional doctrine, the "sliding-scale" approach to the ], called on courts to apply a flexible ] instead of a more rigid ]. He fervently opposed the ], which in his view constituted ]; he and Brennan dissented in more than 1,400 cases in which the majority refused to review a death sentence. He favored a robust interpretation of the ] in decisions such as '']'', and he supported abortion rights in '']'' and other cases. Marshall retired from the Supreme Court in 1991 and was replaced by ]. He died in 1993.
Marshall was a member of ], the first intercollegiate Black ] ], established by ] students in ].


==Early life and education==
==Law career==
Thurgood{{Efn|Marshall was originally named "Thoroughgood" (his paternal grandfather's name), but he changed it to the briefer "Thurgood" when he was in the second grade.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=13}}}} Marshall was born on July 2, 1908, in ], Maryland, to Norma and William Canfield Marshall.<ref name="Davis-1992">{{Cite book |last1=Davis |first1=Michael D. |url=https://archive.org/details/thurgoodmarshall00davi |title=Thurgood Marshall: Warrior at the Bar, Rebel on the Bench |last2=Clark |first2=Hunter R. |publisher=] |year=1992 |isbn=978-1-55972-133-2 |location=Secaucas, New Jersey |author-link=Michael DeMond Davis}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=30, 35}} His father held various jobs as a waiter in hotels, in clubs, and on railroad cars, and his mother was an elementary school teacher.<ref name="Gibson-2012">{{Cite book |last=Gibson |first=Larry S. |url=https://archive.org/details/youngthurgoodmak0000gibs |title=Young Thurgood: The Making of a Supreme Court Justice |publisher=] |year=2012 |isbn=978-1-61614-571-2 |location=Amherst, New York |author-link=Larry S. Gibson}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=41, 45}} The family moved to ] in search of better employment opportunities not long after Thurgood's birth; they returned to Baltimore when he was six years old.<ref name="Gibson-2012" />{{Rp|page=50}} He was an energetic and boisterous child who frequently found himself in trouble.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=37}} Following legal cases was one of William's hobbies, and Thurgood oftentimes went to court with him to observe the proceedings.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=37}} Marshall later said that his father "never told me to become a lawyer, but he turned me into one{{Nbsp}}... He taught me how to argue, challenged my logic on every point, by making me prove every statement I made, even if we were discussing the weather."<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=38}}
===''Murray v. Pearson''===
{{Main|Murray v. Pearson}}
Marshall received his law degree from ] in 1933, and set up a private practice in ]. The following year, he began working with the Baltimore ]. He won his first major civil rights case, '']'', 169 Md. 478 (]). This involved the first attempt to chip away at '']'', a plan created by his co-counsel on the case ]. Marshall represented ], a black ] graduate with excellent credentials who had been denied admission to the ] because of its separate but equal policies. This policy required black students to accept one of three options, attend: ], the ], or out-of-state black institutions. In ], Thurgood Marshall argued the case for Murray, showing that neither of the in-state institutions offered a law school and that such schools were entirely unequal to the University of Maryland. Marshall and Houston expected to lose and intended to appeal to the federal courts. The ] ruled against the state of Maryland and its Attorney General, who represented the University of Maryland, stating "Compliance with the Constitution cannot be deferred at the will of the state. Whatever system is adopted for legal education now must furnish equality of treatment now". Because the state did not appeal the ruling in the federal courts, this state ruling under the U.S. Constitution was the first to overturn Plessy. While it was a moral precedent, it had no authority outside the state of Maryland.
], Thurgood Marshall, and ], congratulating each other, following Supreme Court decision declaring segregation unconstitutional]]


Marshall attended the Colored High and Training School (later ]) in Baltimore, graduating in 1925 with honors.<ref name="Gibson-2012" />{{Rp|pages=69, 79}}<ref name="Williams-1998">{{Cite book |last=Williams |first=Juan |url=https://archive.org/details/thurgoodmarshall0000will |title=Thurgood Marshall: American Revolutionary |publisher=] |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-8129-2028-4 |location=New York |author-link=Juan Williams}}</ref>{{Rp|page=34}} He then enrolled at ] in ], the oldest college for African Americans in the United States.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=43}} The mischievous Marshall was suspended for two weeks in the wake of a ] incident, but he earned good grades in his classes and led the school's debating team to numerous victories.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=43–44, 46}} His classmates included the poet ].<ref name="Gibson-2012" />{{Rp|page=88}} Upon his graduation with honors in 1930 with a bachelor's degree in American literature and philosophy,<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=46}} Marshall—being unable to attend the all-white ]—applied to ] in Washington, D.C., and was admitted.<ref name="Gibson-2012" />{{Rp|page=107}} At Howard, he was mentored by ], who taught his students to be "social engineers" willing to use the law as a vehicle to fight for civil rights.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=56}}<ref name="Tushnet-1997a">{{Cite book |last=Tushnet |first=Mark |title=The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions |publisher=] |year=1997 |isbn=978-0-7910-1377-9 |editor-last=Friedman |editor-first=Leon |volume=4 |location=New York |pages=1497–1519 |chapter=Thurgood Marshall |author-link=Mark Tushnet |editor2-last=Israel |editor2-first=Fred L. |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/justicesofunited0000unse/page/1497/mode/2up}}</ref>{{Rp|page=1499}} Marshall graduated in June 1933 ranked first in his class, and he passed the Maryland ] later that year.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=|pages=59, 61}}
===Chief Counsel for the NAACP===
Marshall won his first Supreme Court case, '']'', 309 U.S. 227 (]). At the age of 32, that same year, he was appointed Chief Counsel for the NAACP. He argued many other cases before the Supreme Court, most of them successfully, including '']'', 321 U.S. 649 (]); '']'', 334 U.S. 1 (]); '']'', 339 U.S. 629 (]); and '']'', 339 U.S. 637 (]). His most famous case as a lawyer was ''] of ]'', 347 U.S. 483 (]), the case in which the Supreme Court ruled that "]" public education was unconstitutional because it could never be truly equal. In total, Marshall won 29 out of the 32 cases he argued before the Supreme Court.


==Legal career==
During the 1950s, Thurgood Marshall developed a friendly relationship with ], the director the ]. In 1956, for example, he privately praised Hoover's campaign to discredit ], a maverick civil rights leader from Mississippi. During a national speaking tour, Howard had criticized the FBI's failure to seriously investigate cases such as the 1955 murders of ] and ]. Ironically, two years earlier Howard had arranged for Marshall to deliver a well-received speech at a rally of his ] in ] only days before the Brown decision.
Marshall started a law practice in Baltimore, but it was not financially successful, partially because he spent much of his time working for the benefit of the community.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1499}} He volunteered with the Baltimore branch of the ] (NAACP).<ref name="Bloch-1993">{{Cite book |last=Bloch |first=Susan Low |url=https://archive.org/details/supremecourtjust0000unse |title=Supreme Court Justices: Illustrated Biographies |publisher=] |year=1993 |isbn=978-1-60871-832-0 |editor-last=Cushman |editor-first=Clare |location=Washington, DC |pages=476–480 |language=en |chapter=Thurgood Marshall |author-link=Susan Low Bloch}}</ref>{{Rp|page=477}} In 1935, Marshall and Houston brought suit against the University of Maryland on behalf of ], an African American whose application to the university's law school had been rejected on account of his race.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=78}}<ref name="Gibson-2012" />{{Rp|pages=237–238}} In that case—'']''—Judge ] ordered that Murray be admitted, and the ] affirmed, holding that it violated ] to admit white students to the law school while keeping blacks from being educated in-state.<ref name="Gibson-2012" />{{Rp|pages=231, 246, 256}} The decision was never ]ed to the ] and therefore did not apply nationwide, but it pleased Marshall, who later said that he had filed the lawsuit "to get even with the bastards" who had kept him from attending the school himself.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=47}}


], ], ], and Thurgood Marshall in 1956]]
President ] appointed Marshall to the ] in ]. A group of ] Senators led by Mississippi's ] and West Virginia's ] held up his confirmation, so he served for the first several months under a '']''. Marshall remained on that court until ], when President ] appointed him ].


In 1936, Marshall joined Houston, who had been appointed as the NAACP's special counsel, in New York City, serving as his assistant.<ref name="Bloch-1993" />{{Rp|page=477}}<ref name="Tushnet-1994">{{Cite book |last=Tushnet |first=Mark V. |url=https://archive.org/details/makingcivilright0000tush |title=Making Civil Rights Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1936–1961 |publisher=] |year=1994 |isbn=978-0-19-508412-2 |location=New York |author-link=Mark Tushnet}}</ref>{{Rp|page=19}} They worked together on the landmark case of '']'' (1938)''.''<ref name="Bloch-1993" />{{Rp|page=477}} When ]'s application to the ] was rejected on account of his race, he filed suit, arguing that his equal-protection rights had been violated because he had not been provided with a legal education substantially equivalent to that which white students received.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=92–93}} After Missouri courts rejected Gaines's claims, Houston—joined by Marshall, who helped to prepare the brief—sought review in the U.S. Supreme Court.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=94}}<ref name="Tushnet-1994" />{{Rp|page=70}} They did not challenge the Court's decision in '']'' (1896), which had accepted the "]" doctrine; instead, they argued that Gaines had been denied an equal education.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=12, 94}} In an opinion by Chief Justice ], the Court held that if Missouri gave whites the opportunity to attend law school in-state, it was required to do the same for blacks.<ref name="Tushnet-1994" />{{Rp|page=70}}
===U.S. Supreme Court===
On ], ], President Johnson appointed Marshall to the Supreme Court following the retirement of Justice ], saying that this was "the right thing to do, the right time to do it, the right man and the right place." He was the 96th person to hold the position, and the first African-American. President Johnson confidently predicted to one biographer, ], that a lot of black baby boys would be named "Thurgood" in honor of this choice (in fact, Kearns's research of birth records in New York and Boston indicates that Johnson's prophecy did not come true).


Houston returned to Washington in 1938, and Marshall assumed his position as special counsel the following year.<ref name="Tushnet-1994" />{{Rp|page=26}} He also became the director-counsel of the ] (the Inc Fund), which had been established as a separate organization for tax purposes.<ref name="Tushnet-1994" />{{Rp|page=27}} In addition to litigating cases and arguing matters before the Supreme Court, he was responsible for raising money, managing the Inc Fund, and conducting public-relations work.<ref name="Tushnet-1994" />{{Rp|page=27}} Marshall litigated a number of cases involving unequal salaries for African Americans, winning nearly all of them; by 1945, he had ended salary disparities in major Southern cities and earned a reputation as a prominent figure in the civil rights movement.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1500}} He also defended individuals who had been charged with crimes before both trial courts and the Supreme Court.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1500}} Of the thirty-two civil rights cases that Marshall argued before the Supreme Court, he won twenty-nine.<ref name="Routledge-2005">{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KngGCAAAQBAJ |title=The Encyclopedia of Civil Liberties in America |publisher=] |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-7656-8063-1 |editor-last=Schultz |editor-first=David |location=Abingdon, UK |pages=260–261 |editor2=Vile |editor-first2=John R.}}</ref>{{Rp|page=598}} He and ] wrote the brief in '']'' (1944), in which the Court ruled the ] unconstitutional, and he successfully argued both '']'' (1946), involving segregation on interstate buses, and a ] to '']'' (1948), involving racially restrictive ].<ref name="Bland-1993">{{Cite book |last=Bland |first=Randall W. |url=https://archive.org/details/privatepressureo0000blan |title=Private Pressure on Public Law: The Legal Career of Justice Thurgood Marshall, 1934–1991 |publisher=] |year=1993 |isbn=978-0-8191-8736-9 |edition=Revised |location=Lanham, Maryland}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=31–32, 42–43, 53–57}}
Marshall served on the Court for the next twenty-four years, compiling a liberal record that included strong support for Constitutional protection of individual rights, especially the rights of criminal suspects against the government. His most frequent ally on the Court (indeed, the pair rarely voted at odds) was Justice ], who consistently joined him in supporting abortion rights and opposing the ]. Brennan and Marshall concluded in '']'' that the death penalty was, in all circumstances, unconstitutional, and never accepted the legitimacy of '']'', which ruled four years later that the death penalty was constitutional in some circumstances. Thereafter, Brennan or Marshall dissented from every denial of certiorari in a capital case and from every decision upholding a sentence of death. See Woodward, ''The Brethren''; Lazarus, ''Closed Chambers''.


From 1939 to 1947, Marshall was a member of the Board of Directors of the ]. During that period, he aligned with the faction which favored a more absolutist defense of civil liberties. Most notably, unlike the majority of the Board, he was consistent in his opposition to Roosevelt's ], which put Japanese Americans into concentration camps. Also, in contrast to most of the Board, Marshall charged that the prosecution of thirty-two right wing opponents of Roosevelt's pre-war foreign policy in the Sedition Trial of 1944 violated the First Amendment.<ref>{{cite book | last=Beito | first=David T. | title=The New Deal's War on the Bill of Rights: The Untold Story of FDR's Concentration Camps, Censorship, and Mass Surveillance | edition=First | pages=183–184, 240| location=Oakland | publisher=Independent Institute | year=2023 | isbn=978-1598133561}}</ref>
Although he is best remembered for his jurisprudence in the fields of ] and ], Marshall made significant contributions to other areas of the law as well. In '']'' he held that the ] required the plaintiff in a suit against a ] for breach of duty of fair representation. In '']'' he articulated a formulation for the standard of materiality in ] that is still applied & used today. In '']'', he weighed in on the tax consequences of the ], permitting a ] to deduct a loss from an exchange of mortgage participation interests.


In the years after 1945, Marshall resumed his offensive against racial segregation in schools.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1501}} Together with his Inc Fund colleagues, he devised a strategy that emphasized the inherent educational disparities caused by segregation rather than the physical differences between the schools provided for blacks and whites.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1501}} The Court ruled in Marshall's favor in '']'' (1948), ordering that Oklahoma provide ] with a legal education, although the justices declined to order that she be admitted to the state's law school for whites.<ref name="Tushnet-1994" />{{Rp|pages=129–130}} In 1950, Marshall brought two cases involving education to the Court: '']'', which was ]'s challenge to unequal treatment at the ]'s graduate school, and '']'', which was ]'s challenge to his being required to attend a blacks-only law school in Texas.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=142–145}} The Supreme Court ruled in favor of both McLaurin and Sweatt on the same day; although the justices did not overrule ''Plessy'' and the separate but equal doctrine, they rejected discrimination against African-American students and the provisions of schools for blacks that were inferior to those provided for whites.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=145–146}}
Among his many ]s were Chief Judge ] of the ], well-known law professors ] and ], and prominent critical legal studies advocate and constitutional law professor ].


], and ] congratulate one another after the Supreme Court's decision in '']''.|alt=Hayes, Marshall, and Nabit, smiling, stand outside the Supreme Court, with the inscription "Equal Justice Under Law" visible overhead]]
==Death==
Marshall died of ] at ] in ], at 2 p.m. on ], ]. He was buried in ]. He was survived by his second wife, ], and their two sons, ] and ]. Marshall left all of his personal papers and notes to the ]. The Librarian of Congress opened Marshall's papers for immediate use by scholars, journalists and the public, insisting that this was Marshall's intent. The Marshall family and several of his close associates disputed this. There is a memorial to Justice Marshall near the ].


Marshall next turned to the issue of segregation in primary and secondary schools.<ref name="Bloch-1993" />{{Rp|page=478}} The NAACP brought suit to challenge segregated schools in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Kansas, South Carolina, and Virginia, arguing both that there were disparities between the physical facilities provided for blacks and whites and that segregation was inherently harmful to African-American children.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1502}} Marshall helped to try the South Carolina case.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1502}} He called numerous social scientists and other ]es to testify regarding the harms of segregation; these included the psychology professor ], who testified that segregation in schools caused ] among African-American students and inflicted damage that was "likely to endure as long as the conditions of segregation exist".<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|pages=201–202}} The five cases eventually reached the Supreme Court and were argued in December 1952.<ref name="Ball-1998">{{Cite book |last=Ball |first=Howard |url=https://archive.org/details/defiantlifethurg00ball |title=A Defiant Life: Thurgood Marshall and the Persistence of Racism in America |publisher=] |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-517-59931-0 |location=New York}}</ref>{{Rp|page=119}} In contrast to the oratorical rhetoric of his adversary—], a former solicitor general and presidential candidate—Marshall spoke plainly and conversationally.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1502}} He stated that the only possible justification for segregation "is an inherent determination that the people who were formerly in slavery, regardless of anything else, shall be kept as near that stage as possible. And now is the time, we submit, that this Court should make clear that that is not what our Constitution stands for."<ref name="Rowan-1993">{{Cite book |last=Rowan |first=Carl T. |url=https://archive.org/details/dreammakersdream00rowa |title=Dream Makers, Dream Breakers: The World of Justice Thurgood Marshall |publisher=] |year=1993 |isbn=978-0-316-75978-6 |location=Boston |author-link=Carl Rowan}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=195–196}} On May 17, 1954, after internal disagreements and a 1953 reargument, the Supreme Court handed down its unanimous decision in '']'', holding in an opinion by Chief Justice ] that: "in the field of public education the doctrine of 'separate but equal' has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal."<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=165, 171, 176, 178}} When Marshall heard Warren read those words, he later said, "I was so happy I was numb".<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=226}}
==Timeline of Marshall's life==
]
1930 - Marshall graduates with honors from ] (])
1933 - Receives law degree from ] (]); begins private practice in Baltimore, Maryland


The Court in ''Brown'' ordered additional arguments on the proper ] for the constitutional violation that it had identified; in ], decided in 1955, the justices ordered that desegregation proceed "with all deliberate speed".<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=135–137}} Their refusal to set a concrete deadline came as a disappointment to Marshall, who had argued for total integration to be completed by September 1956.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=237}}<ref name="Bloch-1993" />{{Rp|page=478}} In the years following the Court's decision, Marshall coordinated challenges to Virginia's "]" to ''Brown'', and he returned to the Court to successfully argue '']'' (1958), involving ]'s attempt to delay integration.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1504}} Marshall, who according to the legal scholar ] "gradually became a civil rights leader more than a civil rights lawyer", spent substantial amounts of time giving speeches and fundraising;<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1503}} in 1960, he accepted an invitation from ] to help draft ].<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|pages=284–285}} By that year, Tushnet writes, he had become "the country's most prominent Supreme Court advocate".<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1505}}
1934 - Begins to work for Baltimore branch of ]


== Court of Appeals ==
1935 - Worked with Charles Houston, wins first major civil rights case, ]
President ], who according to Tushnet "wanted to demonstrate his commitment to the interests of African Americans without incurring enormous political costs", nominated Marshall to be a judge of the ] on September 23, 1961.<ref name="Tushnet-1997">{{Cite book |last=Tushnet |first=Mark V. |url=https://archive.org/details/makingconstituti0000tush |title=Making Constitutional Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1961–1991 |publisher=] |year=1997 |isbn=978-0-19-509314-8 |location=New York |language=en |author-link=Mark Tushnet}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=9–10}} The Second Circuit, which spanned New York, Vermont, and Connecticut, was at the time the nation's prominent appellate court.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=10}} When Congress adjourned, Kennedy gave Marshall a ], and he took the oath of office on October 23.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=10}}


Even after his recess appointment, Southern senators continued to delay Marshall's full confirmation for more than eight months.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=181–183}} A subcommittee of the ] postponed his hearing several times, leading Senator ], a New York Republican, to charge that the three-member subcommittee, which included two pro-segregation Southern Democrats, was biased against Marshall and engaged in unjustifiable delay.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=298}}<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=10}} The subcommittee held several hearings between May and August 1962; Marshall faced harsh questioning from the Southerners over what the scholar Howard Ball described as "marginal issues at best".<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=182}} After further delays from the subcommittee, the full Judiciary Committee bypassed it and, by an 11–4 vote on September 7, endorsed Marshall's nomination.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=12}} Following five hours of floor debate, the full Senate confirmed him by a 56–14 vote on September 11, 1962.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=181–183}}
1936 - Becomes assistant special counsel for NAACP in New York


On the Second Circuit, Marshall authored 98 majority opinions, none of which was reversed by the Supreme Court, as well as 8 concurrences and 12 dissents.<ref name="Daniels-1991">{{Cite book |last=Daniels |first=William J. |title=The Burger Court: Political and Judicial Profiles |publisher=] |year=1991 |isbn=0-252-06135-7 |location=Urbana, Illinois |pages=212–237 |chapter=Justice Thurgood Marshall: The Race for Equal Justice |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/burgercourtpolit0000unse_s3q8/page/212/mode/2up}}</ref>{{Rp|page=216}} He dissented when a majority held in the ] case of ''United States ex rel. Angelet v. Fay'' (1964) that the Supreme Court's 1961 decision in '']'' (which held that the ] applied to the states) did not apply retroactively, writing that the judiciary was "not free to circumscribe the application of a declared constitutional right".<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=184}} In ''United States v. Wilkins'' (1964), he concluded that the ]'s protection against ] applied to the states; in ''People of the State of New York v. Galamison'' (1965), he dissented from a ruling upholding the convictions of civil rights protesters at the ].<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=240–241}} Marshall's dissents indicated that he favored broader interpretations of constitutional protections than did his colleagues.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=311}}
1940 - Wins '']'', the first of 29 Supreme Court victories


== Solicitor General ==
1943 - Won case for integration of schools in ]
Marshall's nomination to the office of ] was widely viewed as a stepping stone to a Supreme Court appointment.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=19}} Johnson pressured Southern senators not to obstruct Marshall's confirmation, and a hearing before a Senate subcommittee lasted only fifteen minutes; the full Senate confirmed him on August 11, 1965.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=251–252}}<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=190}} As Solicitor General, Marshall won fourteen of the nineteen Supreme Court cases he argued.<ref name="Bland-1993" />{{Rp|page=133}} He later characterized the position as "the most effective job" and "maybe the best" job he ever had.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=19}} Marshall argued in '']'' (1966) that conditioning the ability to vote on the payment of a ] was unlawful; in a companion case to '']'' (1966), he unsuccessfully maintained on behalf of the government that federal agents were not always required to inform arrested individuals of their rights.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|pages=320, 323}} He defended the constitutionality of the ] in '']'' (1966) and '']'' (1966), winning both cases.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=259–261}}


== Supreme Court nomination ==
1944 - Successfully argues '']'', overthrowing the South's "]"
{{Main|Thurgood Marshall Supreme Court nomination}}
] in the ] of the ] on the day that Marshall was nominated by Johnson to serve on the Supreme Court]]
]
] footage covering Marshall's first day on the Supreme Court]]


In February 1967, Johnson nominated ] to be ].<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=25}} The nominee's father was ], an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.<ref name="Bland-1993" />{{Rp|page=150}} Fearing that his son's appointment would create substantial ] for him, the elder Clark announced his resignation from the Court.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=25}} For Johnson, who had long desired to nominate a non-white justice, the choice of a nominee to fill the ensuing vacancy "was as easy as it was obvious", according to the scholar ].<ref name="Abraham-1999">{{Cite book |last=Abraham |first=Henry J. |url=https://archive.org/details/justicespresiden0000abra_z8x1/ |title=Justices, Presidents, and Senators: A History of the U.S. Supreme Court Appointments from Washington to Clinton |publisher=] |year=1999 |isbn=0-8476-9604-9 |location=Lanham, Maryland |author-link=Henry J. Abraham}}</ref>{{Rp|page=219}} Although the President briefly considered selecting ] (an African-American appellate judge from Philadelphia) or a female candidate, he decided to choose Marshall.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=25}} Johnson announced the nomination in the ] on June 13, declaring that Marshall "deserves the appointment{{Nbsp}}... I believe that it is the right thing to do, the right time to do it, the right man and the right place."<ref name="Bland-1993" />{{Rp|page=151}}<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=25}}
1946 -Thurgood Marshall received a medal from the NAACP


The public received the nomination favorably, and Marshall was praised by prominent senators from both parties.<ref name="Bland-1993" />{{Rp|pages=151, 153}} The ] held hearings for five days in July.<ref name="Bland-1993" />{{Rp|page=153}} Marshall faced harsh criticism from such senators as Mississippi's ], North Carolina's ], Arkansas's ], and South Carolina's ], all of whom opposed the nominee's liberal jurisprudence.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=195}} In what ] characterized as a "Yahoo-type hazing", Thurmond asked Marshall over sixty questions about various minor aspects of the history of certain constitutional provisions.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=196}} By an 11–5 vote on August 3, the committee recommended that Marshall be confirmed.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=337}} On August 30, after six hours of debate, senators voted 69–11{{Efn|Thirty-two Republicans and thirty-seven Democrats voted to confirm Marshall; one Republican (Thurmond) and ten Southern Democrats voted against him.<ref name="Bland-1993" />{{Rp|page=156}} On the urging of Johnson, twenty Southerners did not cast a vote.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=337}}}} to confirm Marshall to the Supreme Court.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=197}} He took the constitutional oath of office on October 2, 1967, becoming the first African American to serve as a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=338}}
1948 - Wins '']'', in which Supreme Court strikes down legality of racially restrictive covenants


== Supreme Court ==
1950 - Wins Supreme Court victories in two graduate-school integration cases, '']'' and '']''
]


Marshall remained on the Supreme Court for nearly twenty-four years, serving until his retirement in 1991.<ref name="Tushnet-1994" />{{Rp|page=314}} The Court to which he was appointed—the ]—had a consistent liberal majority, and Marshall's jurisprudence was similar to that of its leaders, Chief Justice Warren and Justice ]<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1507}} Although he wrote few major opinions during this period due to his lack of seniority, he was typically in the majority.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=344}}<ref name="Tushnet-2006">{{Cite book |last=Tushnet |first=Mark V. |url= |title=Biographical Encyclopedia of the Supreme Court: The Lives and Legal Philosophies of the Justices |publisher=] |year=2006 |isbn=978-1-933116-48-8 |editor-last=Urofsky |editor-first=Melvin I. |editor-link=Melvin I. Urofsky |location=Washington, DC |pages=334–339 |chapter=Thurgood Marshall |author-link=Mark Tushnet |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/biographicalency0000unse/page/334/mode/2up?view=theater}}</ref>{{Rp|page=335}} As a result of four Supreme Court appointments by President ], however, the liberal coalition vanished.<ref name="Tushnet-2006" />{{Rp|page=335}} The Court under Chief Justice ] (the ]) was not as conservative as some observers had anticipated, but the task of constructing liberal majorities case-by-case was left primarily to Brennan; Marshall's most consequential contributions to constitutional law came in dissent.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1508}} The justice left much of his work to his ]s, preferring to determine the outcome of the case and then allow the clerks to draft the opinion themselves.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=215}} He took umbrage at frequent claims that he did no work and spent his time watching daytime ]s;<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=203}} according to Tushnet, who clerked for Marshall, the idea that he "was a lazy Justice uninterested in the Court's work{{Nbsp}}... is wrong and perhaps racist".<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Tushnet |first=Mark |author-link=Mark Tushnet |date=August 1992 |title=Thurgood Marshall and the Brethren |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/glj80&div=66&id=&page= |journal=] |volume=80 |issue=6 |pages=2109–2130}}</ref>{{Rp|page=2109}} Marshall's closest colleague and friend on the Court was Brennan,<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=210–211}} and the two justices agreed so often that their clerks privately referred to them as "Justice Brennanmarshall".{{Efn|In non-unanimous cases decided by an eight- or nine-justice court, Marshall and Brennan voted the same way 91.67% of the time during the Warren Court, 87.33% of the time during the Burger Court, and 94.86% of the time during the Rehnquist Court.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Epstein |first1=Lee J. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VghVzgEACAAJ |title=The Supreme Court Compendium: Two Centuries of Data, Decisions, and Developments |last2=Segal |first2=Jeffrey A. |last3=Spaeth |first3=Harold J. |last4=Walker |first4=Thomas G. |publisher=] |year=2021 |isbn=978-1-0718-3456-5 |edition=7th |location=Thousand Oaks, California |language=en |author-link=Lee Epstein}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=638, 642, 646}}}}<ref>{{Cite book |url=http://archive.org/details/supremecourtinco0000unse |title=The Supreme Court in Conference, 1940–1985: The Private Discussions Behind Nearly 300 Supreme Court Decisions |publisher=] |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-19-512632-7 |editor-last=Dickson |editor-first=Del |location=New York}}</ref>{{Rp|page=10}} He also had a high regard for Warren, whom he described as "probably the greatest Chief Justice who ever lived".<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=210}}
1951 - Visits ] and ] to investigate charges of racism in U.S. armed forces. He reported that the general practice was one of "rigid segregation".


Marshall consistently sided with the Supreme Court's liberal bloc.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Marszalek |first=John F. |title=Encyclopedia of African-American Civil Rights: From Emancipation to the Present |publisher=] |year=1992 |isbn=0-313-25011-1 |editor-last=Lowery |editor-first=Charles D. |location=Westport, Connecticut |pages=345–347 |chapter=Marshall, Thurgood |author-link=John F. Marszalek |editor-last2=Marszalek |editor-first2=John F. |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofaf00arie/page/345/mode/2up}}</ref>{{Rp|page=347}} According to the scholar William J. Daniels: "His approach to justice was Warren Court–style ]{{Nbsp}}... In his dissenting opinions he emphasized individual rights, fundamental fairness, equal opportunity and protection under the law, the supremacy of the Constitution as the embodiment of rights and privileges, and the Supreme Court's responsibility to play a significant role in giving meaning to the notion of constitutional rights."<ref name="Daniels-1991" />{{Rp|pages=234–235}} Marshall's jurisprudence was pragmatic and relied on his real-world experience as a lawyer and as an African American.<ref name="Tushnet-2006" />{{Rp|page=339}} He disagreed with the notion (favored by some of his conservative colleagues) that the Constitution ];<ref name="Hall-2001">{{Cite book |last=Hall |first=Timothy L. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8AJ7__ph3rgC |title=Supreme Court Justices: A Biographical Dictionary |publisher=] |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-8160-4194-7 |location=New York |pages=202–205}}</ref>{{Rp|page=382}} in a 1987 speech commemorating the Constitution's bicentennial, he said:<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Marshall |first=Thurgood |date=November 1987 |title=Reflections on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/hlr101&id=19&div=&collection= |journal=] |volume=101 |issue=1 |pages=1–5|doi=10.2307/1341223 |jstor=1341223 }}</ref>{{Rp|pages=2, 5}}
1954 - Wins '']'', landmark case that demolishes legal basis for segregation in America


{{Blockquote|text=... I do not believe that the meaning of the Constitution was forever "fixed" at the Philadelphia Convention. Nor do I find the wisdom, foresight, and sense of justice exhibited by the framers particularly profound. To the contrary, the government they devised was defective from the start, requiring several amendments, a civil war, and momentous social transformation to attain the system of constitutional government, and its respect for the individual freedoms and human rights, that we hold as fundamental today{{nbsp}}... "We the People" no longer enslave, but the credit does not belong to the framers. It belongs to those who refused to acquiesce in outdated notions of "liberty", "justice", and "equality", and who strived to better them{{nbsp}}... I plan to celebrate the bicentennial of the Constitution as a living document, including the Bill of Rights and the other amendments protecting individual freedoms and human rights.}}
1956 - Wins '']'', Ending the practice of segregation on buses and ending the Montgomery Bus Boycott.


=== Equal protection and civil rights ===
1961 - Defends civil rights demonstrators, winning Supreme Circuit Court victory in '']''; nominated to Second Court of Appeals by President ]
]


As the Court became increasingly conservative, Marshall found himself dissenting in numerous cases regarding racial discrimination.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1511}} When the majority held in '']'' that a lower court had gone too far in ordering ] to reduce racial imbalances between schools in Detroit, he dissented, criticizing his colleagues for what he viewed as a lack of resolve to implement desegregation even when faced with difficulties and public resistance.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|pages=344–345}} In a dissent in '']'' that according to Tushnet "demonstrated his sense of the practical reality that formed the context for abstract legal issues", he argued that a street closure that made it more difficult for residents of an African-American neighborhood to reach a city park was unconstitutional because it sent "a plain and powerful symbolic message" to blacks "that because of their race, they are to stay out of the all-white enclave{{Nbsp}}... and should instead take the long way around".<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|pages=91–92}} Marshall felt that ] was both necessary and constitutional;<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=257}} in an opinion in '']'', he commented that it was "more than a little ironic that, after several hundred years of class-based discrimination against Negroes, the Court is unwilling to hold that a class-based remedy for that discrimination is permissible".<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=131}} Dissenting in '']'', he rejected the majority's decision to strike down an affirmative-action program for government contractors, stating that he did "not believe that this Nation is anywhere close to eradicating racial discrimination or its vestiges".<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|pages=139–143}}
1961 - Appointed circuit judge, makes 112 rulings, all of them later upheld by Supreme Court (1961-1965)


Marshall's most influential contribution to constitutional doctrine was his "sliding-scale" approach to the Equal Protection Clause, which posited that the judiciary should assess a law's constitutionality by balancing its goals against its impact on groups and rights.<ref name="Tushnet-2006" />{{Rp|page=336}} Dissenting in '']'', a case in which the majority upheld Maryland's $250-a-month cap on welfare payments against claims that it was insufficient for large families, he argued that ] was not appropriate in cases involving "the literally vital interests of a powerless minority".<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|pages=98–99}} In what ] described as the justice's greatest opinion, Marshall dissented when the Court in '']'' upheld a system in which local schools were funded mainly through property taxes, arguing that the policy (which meant that poorer school districts obtained less money than richer ones) resulted in unconstitutional discrimination.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=224–225}}<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|pages=100–101}} His dissent in '']'', in which the Court upheld the ]'s ban on the use of ] funds to pay for ], rebuked the majority for applying a "relentlessly formalistic catechism" that failed to take account of the amendment's "crushing burden on indigent women".<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|pages=102–103}} Although Marshall's sliding-scale approach was never adopted by the Court as a whole, the legal scholar ] comments that "his consistent criticism seems to have prodded the Court to somewhat greater flexibility".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bloch |first=Susan Low |title=The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States |publisher=] |year=1992 |isbn=978-0-19-505835-2 |editor-last=Hall |editor-first=Kermit L. |editor-link=Kermit L. Hall |location=New York |pages=526–528 |chapter=Marshall, Thurgood |author-link=Susan Low Bloch |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/oxfordcompaniont00hall/page/526/mode/2up}}</ref>{{Rp|page=527}}
1965 - Appointed ] by President ]; wins 14 of the 19 cases he argues for the government (1965-1967)


=== Criminal procedure and capital punishment ===
1967 - Becomes first African American elevated to U.S. Supreme Court (1967-1991)
Marshall supported the Warren Court's constitutional decisions on criminal law, and he wrote the opinion of the Court in '']'', which held that the Constitution's prohibition of double jeopardy applied to the states.<ref name="Tushnet-2006" />{{Rp|page=337}} After the retirements of Warren and Justice ], however, "Marshall was continually shocked at the refusal" of the Burger and ]s "to hold police and those involved in the criminal justice system responsible for acting according to the language and the spirit of fundamental procedural guarantees", according to Ball.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=286}} He favored a strict interpretation of the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement and opposed rulings that made exceptions to that provision;<ref name="Ogletree-1989">{{Cite journal |last=Ogletree |first=Charles J. |author-link=Charles Ogletree |date=1989 |title=Justice Marshall's Criminal Justice Jurisprudence: 'The Right Thing to Do, the Right Time to Do It, the Right Man and the Right Place' |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/hblj6&id=117&div=&collection= |journal=Harvard Blackletter Journal |volume=6 |pages=111–130}}</ref>{{Rp|page=112}} in '']'', for instance, he indignantly dissented when the Court upheld a conviction that was based on evidence discovered during a warrantless search of containers that had been found in an automobile.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=291–292}} Marshall felt strongly that the ] should be expanded and fully enforced.<ref name="Ogletree-1989" />{{Rp|page=112}} In cases involving the ], he argued that defendants must have competent attorneys; dissenting in '']'', Marshall (parting ways with Brennan) rejected the majority's conclusion that defendants must prove prejudice in ] cases.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|pages=187–188}}<ref name="Ogletree-1989" />{{Rp|page=112}}


Marshall fervently opposed ] throughout his time on the Court, arguing that it was ] and therefore unconstitutional under the ].<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=318}} He was the only justice with considerable experience defending those charged with capital crimes, and he expressed concern about the fact that injustices in death-penalty cases could not be remedied, often commenting: "Death is so lasting."<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|pages=1514–1515}} In '']'', a case in which the Court struck down the capital-punishment statutes that were in force at the time, Marshall wrote that the death penalty was "morally unacceptable to the people of the United States at this time in their history" and that it "falls upon the poor, the ignorant, and the underprivileged members of society".<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1515}} When the Court in '']'' upheld new death-penalty laws that required juries to consider ] and ], he dissented, describing capital punishment as a "vestigial savagery" that was immoral and violative of the Eighth Amendment.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=305}} Afterwards, Marshall and Brennan dissented in every instance in which the Court declined to review a death sentence, filing more than 1,400 dissents that read: "Adhering to our views that the death penalty is in all circumstances cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, we would grant ] and vacate the death sentence in this case."<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=175}}
1991 - Retires from the Supreme Court


=== First Amendment ===
1993 - Dies at age 84 in Bethesda, MD, near Washington, D.C.
According to Ball, Marshall felt that the rights protected by the ] were the Constitution's most important principles and that they could be restricted only for extremely compelling reasons.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=316}} In a 1969 opinion in '']'', he held that it was unconstitutional to criminalize the possession of ].<ref name="Tushnet-2006" />{{Rp|page=335}} For the Court, he reversed the conviction of a Georgia man charged with possessing pornography, writing: "If the First Amendment means anything, it means that a State has no business telling a man, sitting alone in his own house, what books he may read or what films he may watch."<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=317}} In '']'', he wrote for the Court that protesters had the right to picket on private property that was open to the public—a decision that was effectively overruled (over Marshall's dissent) four years later in ].<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=323–324}} He emphasized equality in his free speech opinions, writing in '']'' that "above all else, the First Amendment means that government has no power to restrict expression because of its messages, its ideas, its subject matter, or its content".<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1513}} Making comparisons to earlier civil rights protests, Marshall vigorously dissented in '']'', a case in which the Court ruled that the government could forbid homeless individuals from protesting poverty by sleeping overnight in ]; although Burger decried their claims as "frivolous" attempts to "trivialize" the Constitution, Marshall argued that the protesters were engaged in constitutionally protected ].<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=378}}<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=326–327}}


Marshall joined the majority in '']'' and '']'', two cases in which the Court held that the First Amendment protected the right to burn the American flag.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=332–333}} He favored the total ], dissenting when the Court upheld in '']'' a city's display of a ] and joining the majority in '']'' to strike down an Alabama law regarding prayer in schools.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=|pages=343–346}} On the issue of the ], Marshall voted with the majority in '']'' to hold that a school attendance law could not be constitutionally applied to the ], and he joined Justice ]'s dissent when the Court in '']'' upheld a restriction on religious uses of ] and curtailed '']''<nowiki/>'s ] standard.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=351–353}} In the view of ] and Scott Burrell, the justice was "an unyielding supporter of civil liberties", whose "commitment to the values of the First Amendment was enhanced from actually realizing the historical consequences of being on the weaker and poorer side of power".<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Smith |first1=J. Clay Jr |author-link=J. Clay Smith Jr. |last2=Burrell |first2=Scott |date=Summer 1994 |title=Justice Thurgood Marshall and the First Amendment |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/arzjl26&id=473&div=&collection= |journal=] |volume=26 |issue=2 |pages=461–478}}</ref>{{Rp|page=477}}
For more, see Bradley C. S. Watson, "]" in ''].''


==Dedications== === Privacy ===
In Marshall's view, the Constitution guaranteed to all citizens the ]; he felt that although the Constitution nowhere mentioned such a right expressly, it could be inferred from various provisions of the ].<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=356}} He joined the majority in '']'' to strike down a statute that prohibited the distribution or sale of ] to unmarried persons, dissented when the Court in '']'' upheld an ], and dissented from the majority's decision in '']'' that the Constitution did not protect an unconditional ].<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=358–364}} On the issue of abortion rights, the author ] comments that "no justice ever supported a woman's right to choice as uncompromisingly as Marshall did".<ref name="Rowan-1993" />{{Rp|page=323}} He joined Blackmun's opinion for the Court in '']'', which held that the Constitution protected a woman's right to have an abortion,<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=342}} and he consistently voted against state laws that sought to limit that right in cases such as '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', and '']''.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Baugh |first=Joyce A. |date=Winter 1996 |title=Justice Thurgood Marshall: Advocate for Gender Justice |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/1311811713 |journal=Western Journal of Black Studies |volume=20 |issue=4 |pages=195–206|id={{ProQuest|1311811713}} }}</ref>{{Rp|page=203}}
*The Thurgood Marshall Living Learning Center is a 324 room Modern Dormitory/Conference Center located at Chief Justice Marshall's alma mater ] .


=== Other topics ===
*The ] ], which Marshall fought to desegregate, renamed and dedicated its law library in his honor.
During his service on the Supreme Court, Marshall participated in over 3,400 cases and authored 322 majority opinions.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=401}} He was a member of the unanimous majority in '']'' that rejected President Nixon's claims of absolute ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Zelden |first=Charles L. |date=March 2017 |title='How Do You Feel about Writing Dissents'? Thurgood Marshall's Dissenting Vision for America |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/jspcth42&div=10&id=&page= |journal=] |volume=42 |issue=1 |pages=77–100|doi=10.1111/jsch.12136 |s2cid=151734746 }}</ref>{{Rp|page=78}} Marshall wrote several influential decisions in the fields of ] and ], including a frequently-cited opinion regarding ] in '']''<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Winter |first=Ralph K. |author-link=Ralph K. Winter Jr. |date=October 1991 |title=TM's Legacy |url=https://openyls.law.yale.edu/bitstream/handle/20.500.13051/8662/15_101YaleLJ25_1991_1992_.pdf?sequence=2&isAllowed=y |journal=] |volume=101 |issue=1 |pages=25–29}}</ref>{{Rp|page=25}} His opinions involving ], such as '']'', were pragmatic and de-emphasized the importance of state boundaries.<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1514}} According to Tushnet, Marshall was "the Court's liberal specialist in ]"; he endeavored to protect Native Americans from regulatory action on the part of the states.<ref name="Tushnet-2006" />{{Rp|page=338}} He favored a rigid interpretation of procedural requirements, saying in one case that "rules mean what they say"—a position that in Tushnet's view was motivated by the justice's "traditionalist streak".<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|pages=185–186}}


Like most Supreme Court justices, many of Marshall's ]s went on to become prominent lawyers and legal scholars. His clerks included future Supreme Court justice ], U.S. circuit judge ], and legal scholars ], ], and ].
*The ] has named one of its ] after Thurgood Marshall.


== Personal life ==
*On ], ], the law school at Texas Southern University was formally named The Thurgood Marshall School of Law. The school's mission is to "significantly impact the diversity of the legal profession."
], and their children ] (bottom left) and ] (bottom right), 1965]]


Marshall wed ] on September 4, 1929, while he was a student at Lincoln University.<ref name="Gibson-2012" />{{Rp|pages=101, 103}} They remained married until her death from cancer in 1955.<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=180}} Marshall married ], an NAACP secretary, eleven months later; they had two children: ] and ].<ref name="Davis-1992" />{{Rp|page=|pages=180–181}} Thurgood Jr. became an attorney and worked in the ], and John directed the ] and served as ].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Brown |first=DeNeen L. |date=August 19, 2016 |title=A Colorblind Love |pages=B2 |newspaper=] |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/1812382061 |access-date=August 11, 2022|id={{ProQuest|1812382061}} }}</ref>
*], at one time a predominantly white school located in ], changed its name to ] in honor of Justice Marshall's work on the Court.


Marshall was an active member of the ] and served as a delegate to its 1964 convention, walking out after a resolution to recognize a right to disobey immoral segregation laws was voted down.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=180}} He was a ], attending meetings and participating in rituals.<ref name="Tushnet-1997" />{{Rp|page=180}} He refused to attend the Supreme Court's annual Christmas party believing that it infringed upon the separation of church and state.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=343}}
*In 1987, the ] was established to carry on Justice Marshall's legacy of equal access to higher education by supporting exceptional merit scholars attending America's Public Historically Black Colleges and Universities.


Justice ], who served with Marshall on the Supreme Court for a decade, wrote that "it was rare during our conference deliberations that he would not share an anecdote, a joke or a story"; although O'Connor initially treated the stories as "welcome diversions", she later "realized that behind most of the anecdotes was a relevant legal point".<ref>{{Cite journal |last=O'Connor |first=Sandra Day |author-link=Sandra Day O'Connor |date=Summer 1992 |title=Thurgood Marshall: The Influence of a Raconteur |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/stflr44&div=50&id=&page= |journal=] |volume=44 |issue=6 |pages=1217–1220|doi=10.2307/1229051 |jstor=1229051 }}</ref>{{Rp|page=1217–1218}}
*The Illinois General Assembly named the portion of ] from Cairo to Chicago the Thurgood Marshall Memorial Freeway.


== Retirement, later life, and death ==
*On ], ], Thurgood Marshall Middle School, in ], was opened.
]]]


Marshall did not wish to retire—he frequently said "I was appointed to a life term, and I intend to serve it"—but he had been in ill health for many years, and Brennan's retirement in 1990 left him unhappy and isolated on the Court.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|pages=377–378}}<ref name="Atkinson-1999">{{Cite book |last=Atkinson |first=David N. |url=https://archive.org/details/leavingbenchsupr0000atki |title=Leaving the Bench: Supreme Court Justices at the End |publisher=] |year=1999 |isbn=978-0-7006-0946-8 |location=Lawrence, Kansas}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=156, 158}} The 82-year-old justice announced on June 27, 1991, that he would retire.<ref name="Bloch-1993" />{{Rp|page=480}} When asked at a ] what was wrong with him that would cause him to leave the Court, he replied: "What's ''wrong'' with me? I'm old. I'm getting old and coming apart!"<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=379}}
*The ], D.C. voted at its annual meeting January 2006 to propose ] when the national church holds its general conference in June. He could become a saint in ].


President ] (whom Marshall loathed) nominated ], a conservative who had served in the Reagan and Bush administrations, to replace Marshall.<ref name="Ball-1998" />{{Rp|page=379}} His retirement took effect on October 1.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Biskupic |first1=Joan |url=https://archive.org/details/guidetoussupreme00bisk |title=Guide to the U.S. Supreme Court |last2=Witt |first2=Elder |publisher=] |year=1997 |isbn=978-1-56802-130-0 |edition=3rd |location=Washington, DC |author-link=Joan Biskupic}}</ref>{{Rp|page=951}}
*Near his longtime home in ], ] is dedicated as the Thurgood Marshall Memorial Highway. In addition, the Lake Barcroft community awards the to two graduating students of nearby ].


Marshall served as a ] on the Second Circuit for a week in January 1992, and he received the ]'s highest award in August of that year.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|pages=394–395}} His health continued to deteriorate, and, on January 24, 1993, at the ], he died of ].<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=395}}<ref name="Atkinson-1999" />{{Rp|page=159}} He was 84 years old.<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=396}}
* Thurgood Marshall High School in ] located at ] was renamed in honor of Justice Thurgood Marshall.


Marshall ] in the Great Hall of the Supreme Court,<ref name="Atkinson-1999" />{{Rp|page=159}} and thousands thronged there to pay their respects;<ref name="Bloch-1993" />{{Rp|page=480}} more than four thousand attended his funeral service at the ].<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=397}} The civil rights leader ] said that Marshall had "demonstrat that the law could be an instrument of liberation", while Chief Justice ] gave a eulogy in which he said: "Inscribed above the front entrance to the Supreme Court building are the words 'Equal justice under law'. Surely no one individual did more to make these words a reality than Thurgood Marshall."<ref>{{Cite news |last=Labaton |first=Stephen |date=January 29, 1993 |title=Thousands Fill Cathedral To Pay Tribute to Marshall |language=en-US |pages=A16 |work=] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1993/01/29/us/thousands-fill-cathedral-to-pay-tribute-to-marshall.html |access-date=September 15, 2022}}</ref> Marshall was buried at ].<ref name="Williams-1998" />{{Rp|page=398}}
* On ], ] was renamed "Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport" in his honor.


== Appraisal and legacy ==
* ], a one-man show based on his life, ] at the ] which starred ] and was directed by ]
], renamed in Marshall's honor in 2001]]


According to the scholar Daniel Moak, Marshall "profoundly shaped the political direction of the United States", "transformed constitutional law", and "opened up new facets of citizenship to black Americans".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Moak |first=Daniel |title=African American Political Thought |publisher=] |year=2020 |isbn=978-0-226-72607-6 |editor-last=Rogers |editor-first=Melvin L. |location=Chicago |pages=386–412 |chapter=Thurgood Marshall: The Legacy and Limits of Equality under the Law |doi=10.7208/9780226726076-018 |doi-broken-date=November 1, 2024 |editor-last2=Turner |editor-first2=Jack |chapter-url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.7208/9780226726076-018/html}}</ref>{{Rp|page=411}} For Tushnet, he was "probably the most important American lawyer of the twentieth century";<ref name="Tushnet-1997a" />{{Rp|page=1498}} in the view of the political scientist ], he was "one of the greatest leaders in the history of the African-American struggle for freedom and equality".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Smith |first=Robert C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Kb0sFxQ6yHoC |title=Encyclopedia of African American Politics |publisher=] |year=2003 |isbn=978-1-4381-3019-4 |location=New York |language=en |author-link=Robert C. Smith (political scientist)}}</ref>{{Rp|page=218}} A 1999 survey of black political scientists listed Marshall as one of the ten greatest African-American leaders in history; panelists described him as the "greatest jurist of the twentieth century" and stated that he "spearheaded the creation of the legal foundations of the civil rights movement".<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Smith |first=Robert C. |author-link=Robert C. Smith (political scientist) |date=2001 |title=Rating Black Leaders |url=https://www.ncobps.org/assets/uploads/2021/10/Volume-8-The-Politics-of-the-Black-Nation-A-Twenty-Five-Year-Retrospective-2001.pdf#page=136 |journal=National Political Science Review |volume=8 |pages=124–138}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=129, 132}} Scholars of the Supreme Court have not rated Marshall as highly as some of his colleagues: although his pre–Supreme Court legal career and his staunch liberalism have met with broad approval, a perception that he lacked substantial influence over his fellow justices has harmed his reputation.<ref name="Ross-1996">{{Cite journal |last=Ross |first=William G. |date=Winter 1996 |title=The Ratings Game: Factors That Influence Judicial Reputation |url=https://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1534&context=mulr&httpsredir=1&referer= |journal=] |volume=79 |issue=2 |pages=402–452}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=407–408, 439}} In Abraham's view, "he was one of America's greatest public lawyers, but he was not a great Supreme Court justice".<ref name="Abraham-1999" />{{Rp|page=222}} A 1993 survey of legal scholars found that Marshall was ranked as the seventeenth-greatest justice of the Supreme Court—a rating that, while still lower than that of his fellow liberal justices, was substantially higher than was recorded in an earlier survey.<ref name="Ross-1996" />{{Rp|page=408}}
==References==
*Juan Williams, Thurgood Marshall: American Revolutionary (1998 book).
*David T. Beito and Linda Royster Beito, ''T.R.M. Howard: Pragmatism over Strict Integrationist Ideology in the Mississippi Delta, 1942-1954'' in Glenn Feldman, ed., ''Before Brown: Civil Rights and White Backlash in the Modern South'' (2004 book), 68-95.


Marshall has received numerous tributes.<ref name="Gilmore-2008">{{Cite magazine |last=Gilmore |first=Brian |date=Summer 2008 |title=Lawyer of the Century: Thurgood Marshall's Legacy Looms Large in a World He Helped to Create |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nkIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA20 |magazine=] |pages=20–23}}</ref>{{Rp|page=20}} The state of Maryland renamed Baltimore's airport the ] in 2005, and the University of Maryland's ] is named in his honor.<ref name="Gilmore-2008" />{{Rp|page=20}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Bloch |first=Susan Low |author-link=Susan Low Bloch |date=2009 |title=Celebrating Thurgood Marshall: The Prophetic Dissenter |url=https://scholarship.law.georgetown.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1938&context=facpub |journal=] |volume=52 |issue=3 |pages=617–635}}</ref>{{Rp|page=617}} Buildings named for Marshall include New York's 590-foot-high ] (renamed in 2001), where he heard cases as an appellate judge, and ] in Washington.<ref name="Williams-2017">{{Cite web |last=Williams |first=Pete |author-link=Pete Williams (journalist) |date=October 10, 2017 |title=Film Marks 50th Anniversary of Thurgood Marshall's Supreme Court Arrival |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/film-marks-50th-anniversary-thurgood-marshall-s-supreme-court-arrival-n806086 |access-date=August 13, 2022 |website=] |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Resnik |first=Judith |date=Summer 2012 |title=Building the Federal Judiciary (Literally and Legally): The Monuments of Chief Justices Taft, Warren and Rehnquist |url=https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3711&context=ilj |journal=] |volume=87 |issue=3 |pages=823–950}}</ref>{{Rp|pages=859–860}} He is the namesake of streets and schools throughout the nation.<ref name="Gilmore-2008" />{{Rp|page=20}} Marshall posthumously received the ] from President ] in 1993,<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Paulsen |first1=Michael Stokes |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7giCBgAAQBAJ |title=The Constitution: An Introduction |last2=Paulsen |first2=Luke |publisher=] |year=2015 |isbn=978-0-465-05371-1 |location=New York |language=en}}</ref>{{Rp|page=253}} and the ] issued a ] in his honor in 2003.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Roberts |first=Roxanne |author-link=Roxanne Roberts |date=February 1, 2003 |title=A Man Who Pushed The Envelope: Thurgood Marshall Commemorated With A Stamp and a Soiree |pages=C1 |newspaper=] |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/409524819 |access-date=August 14, 2022|id={{ProQuest|409524819}} }}</ref> He was depicted by ] in the 1991 television movie ],<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rollins |first=Peter C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iAMb9q7cqAgC |title=The Columbia Companion to American History on Film: How the Movies Have Portrayed the American Past |publisher=] |year=2003 |isbn=978-0-231-50839-1 |location=New York |language=en}}</ref>{{Rp|page=335}} by ] in ]'s Broadway play ],<ref>{{Cite news |last=Marks |first=Peter |date=May 31, 2010 |title=Serving Justice Onstage: Laurence Fishburne is Supremely Pleased to Perform 'Thurgood' in Washington |pages=C1 |newspaper=] |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/347793653 |access-date=August 14, 2022|id={{ProQuest|347793653}} }}</ref> and by ] in the 2017 film ].<ref name="Williams-2017" />
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== Notes ==
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==References==
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==Further reading==
{{Refbegin}}
* {{cite book |last1 = Aldred |first1 = Lisa | last2 = Marshall | first2 = Thurgood | last3 = Wagner | first3 = Heather Lehr | title = Thurgood Marshall: Supreme Court Justice | year = 2004 | publisher = Chelsea House Publications | isbn = 978-0791081631 }}
* {{cite book |title=Root and Branch: Charles Hamilton Houston, Thurgood Marshall, and the Struggle to End Segregation |url=https://www.bloomsburypress.com/books/catalog/root_and_branch_hc_067 |last=James |first=Rawn Jr. |year=2010 |publisher=Bloomsbury Press |access-date=November 24, 2009 |archive-date=March 1, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120301091016/http://www.bloomsburypress.com/books/catalog/root_and_branch_hc_067 |url-status=dead }}
* {{cite book |editor-last=Kallen |editor-first=Stuart A. |title=Thurgood Marshall: A Dream of Justice for All |publisher=Abdo and Daughters |year=1993 |isbn=1-56239-258-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/thurgoodmarshall00kall }}
* Mack, Kenneth W., (2012). ''''. Harvard University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-674-04687-0}}.
* {{Cite book|editor-last= Vile |editor-first= John R.| title= Great American Judges: An Encyclopedia |volume=1| place= Santa Barbara |publisher=ABC–CLIO|year= 2003 |isbn= 978-1-57607-989-8}}.
* {{cite book |first=Bradley C. S. |last=Watson |chapter=The Jurisprudence of William Joseph Brennan, Jr., and Thurgood Marshall |editor-last=Frost |editor-first=Bryan-Paul |editor2-first=Jeffrey |editor2-last=Sikkenga |title=History of American Political Thought |location=Lexington |publisher=Lexington Books |year=2003 |isbn=0-7391-0623-6 }}
* White, G. Edward (2007), ''The American Judicial Tradition: Profiles of Leading American Judges'' (3rd ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-19-513962-4}}.
* {{cite book|last =Woodward |first=Robert | author-link=Bob Woodward |author2=Armstrong, Scott |author-link2=Scott Armstrong (journalist) | title =]| year =1979 |publisher=Simon & Schuster | location =New York | isbn = 978-0-7432-7402-9 }}


===Historiography and memory===
]
* Hodges, Ruth A. '''', (], Washington, DC, February 1993).
]
* {{cite book |last=Martin |first=Fenton S. |author2=Goehlert, Robert U. |title=The U.S. Supreme Court: A Bibliography |publisher=Congressional Quarterly Books |year=1990 |location=Washington, D.C. |isbn=0-87187-554-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/ussupremecourtbi0000mart }}
]

]
===Primary sources===
]
* Marshall, Thurgood (1950). "Mr. Justice ] and ]." 48 '']'' 745.
]
* Marshall, Thurgood (1987). "Reflections on the bicentennial of the United States Constitution." ''Harvard Law Review'' 101: 1+ .
]
* Marshall, Thurgood (1987). "The Constitution's Bicentennial: Commemorating the Wrong Document" ''Vanderbilt Law Review'' 40: 1337+ .
]
* Tushnet, Mark V. ed. (2001). ''Thurgood Marshall: His Speeches, Writings, Arguments, Opinions, and Reminiscences''.
]
{{Refend}}
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==External links==
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{{Commons category|Thurgood Marshall}}
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{{Wikiquote}}
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* , from the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library
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Latest revision as of 02:31, 14 December 2024

US Supreme Court justice from 1967 to 1991 For other uses, see Thurgood Marshall (disambiguation).

Thurgood Marshall
Official portrait, 1976
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
In office
October 2, 1967 – October 1, 1991
Appointed byLyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byTom C. Clark
Succeeded byClarence Thomas
32nd Solicitor General of the United States
In office
August 23, 1965 – August 30, 1967
PresidentLyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byArchibald Cox
Succeeded byErwin Griswold
Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
In office
October 5, 1961 – August 23, 1965
Appointed byJohn F. Kennedy
Preceded bySeat established
Succeeded byWilfred Feinberg
President of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund
In office
February 12, 1940 – October 5, 1961
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byJack Greenberg
Personal details
BornThoroughgood Marshall
(1908-07-02)July 2, 1908
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
DiedJanuary 24, 1993(1993-01-24) (aged 84)
Bethesda, Maryland, U.S.
Resting placeArlington National Cemetery
Political partyDemocratic
Spouses
Children
Alma mater
Occupation
  • Civil rights lawyer
  • jurist
Known forFirst African-American Supreme Court justice
Thurgood Marshall's voice Thurgood Marshall delivers the opinion of the Court in Bounds v. Smith
Recorded April 27, 1977
This article is part of a series on
Liberalism
in the United States
Schools
Principles
History
Intellectuals
Politicians
Commentators
Jurists
Parties
Think tanks
Other organizations
Media
See also

Thoroughgood "Thurgood" Marshall (July 2, 1908 – January 24, 1993) was an American civil rights lawyer and jurist who served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1967 until 1991. He was the Supreme Court's first African-American justice. Prior to his judicial service, he was an attorney who fought for civil rights, leading the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. Marshall was a prominent figure in the movement to end racial segregation in American public schools. He won 29 of the 32 civil rights cases he argued before the Supreme Court, culminating in the Court's landmark 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which rejected the separate but equal doctrine and held segregation in public education to be unconstitutional. President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed Marshall to the Supreme Court in 1967. A staunch liberal, he frequently dissented as the Court became increasingly conservative.

Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Marshall attended Lincoln University and the Howard University School of Law. At Howard, he was mentored by Charles Hamilton Houston, who taught his students to be "social engineers" willing to use the law to fight for civil rights. Marshall opened a law practice in Baltimore but soon joined Houston at the NAACP in New York. They worked together on the segregation case of Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada; after Houston returned to Washington, Marshall took his place as special counsel of the NAACP, and he became director-counsel of the newly formed NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. He participated in numerous landmark Supreme Court cases involving civil rights, including Smith v. Allwright, Morgan v. Virginia, Shelley v. Kraemer, McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Regents, Sweatt v. Painter, Brown, and Cooper v. Aaron. His approach to desegregation cases emphasized the use of sociological data to show that segregation was inherently unequal.

In 1961, President John F. Kennedy appointed Marshall to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, where he favored a broad interpretation of constitutional protections. Four years later, Johnson appointed him as the U.S. Solicitor General. In 1967, Johnson nominated Marshall to replace Justice Tom C. Clark on the Supreme Court; despite opposition from Southern senators, he was confirmed by a vote of 69 to 11. He was often in the majority during the consistently liberal Warren Court period, but after appointments by President Richard Nixon made the Court more conservative, Marshall frequently found himself in dissent. His closest ally on the Court was Justice William J. Brennan Jr., and the two voted the same way in most cases.

Marshall's jurisprudence was pragmatic and drew on his real-world experience. His most influential contribution to constitutional doctrine, the "sliding-scale" approach to the Equal Protection Clause, called on courts to apply a flexible balancing test instead of a more rigid tier-based analysis. He fervently opposed the death penalty, which in his view constituted cruel and unusual punishment; he and Brennan dissented in more than 1,400 cases in which the majority refused to review a death sentence. He favored a robust interpretation of the First Amendment in decisions such as Stanley v. Georgia, and he supported abortion rights in Roe v. Wade and other cases. Marshall retired from the Supreme Court in 1991 and was replaced by Clarence Thomas. He died in 1993.

Early life and education

Thurgood Marshall was born on July 2, 1908, in Baltimore, Maryland, to Norma and William Canfield Marshall. His father held various jobs as a waiter in hotels, in clubs, and on railroad cars, and his mother was an elementary school teacher. The family moved to New York City in search of better employment opportunities not long after Thurgood's birth; they returned to Baltimore when he was six years old. He was an energetic and boisterous child who frequently found himself in trouble. Following legal cases was one of William's hobbies, and Thurgood oftentimes went to court with him to observe the proceedings. Marshall later said that his father "never told me to become a lawyer, but he turned me into one ... He taught me how to argue, challenged my logic on every point, by making me prove every statement I made, even if we were discussing the weather."

Marshall attended the Colored High and Training School (later Frederick Douglass High School) in Baltimore, graduating in 1925 with honors. He then enrolled at Lincoln University in Chester County, Pennsylvania, the oldest college for African Americans in the United States. The mischievous Marshall was suspended for two weeks in the wake of a hazing incident, but he earned good grades in his classes and led the school's debating team to numerous victories. His classmates included the poet Langston Hughes. Upon his graduation with honors in 1930 with a bachelor's degree in American literature and philosophy, Marshall—being unable to attend the all-white University of Maryland Law School—applied to Howard University School of Law in Washington, D.C., and was admitted. At Howard, he was mentored by Charles Hamilton Houston, who taught his students to be "social engineers" willing to use the law as a vehicle to fight for civil rights. Marshall graduated in June 1933 ranked first in his class, and he passed the Maryland bar examination later that year.

Legal career

Marshall started a law practice in Baltimore, but it was not financially successful, partially because he spent much of his time working for the benefit of the community. He volunteered with the Baltimore branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Persons (NAACP). In 1935, Marshall and Houston brought suit against the University of Maryland on behalf of Donald Gaines Murray, an African American whose application to the university's law school had been rejected on account of his race. In that case—Murray v. Pearson—Judge Eugene O'Dunne ordered that Murray be admitted, and the Maryland Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that it violated equal protection to admit white students to the law school while keeping blacks from being educated in-state. The decision was never appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States and therefore did not apply nationwide, but it pleased Marshall, who later said that he had filed the lawsuit "to get even with the bastards" who had kept him from attending the school himself.

NAACP leaders Henry L. Moon, Roy Wilkins, Herbert Hill, and Thurgood Marshall in 1956

In 1936, Marshall joined Houston, who had been appointed as the NAACP's special counsel, in New York City, serving as his assistant. They worked together on the landmark case of Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada (1938). When Lloyd Lionel Gaines's application to the University of Missouri's law school was rejected on account of his race, he filed suit, arguing that his equal-protection rights had been violated because he had not been provided with a legal education substantially equivalent to that which white students received. After Missouri courts rejected Gaines's claims, Houston—joined by Marshall, who helped to prepare the brief—sought review in the U.S. Supreme Court. They did not challenge the Court's decision in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), which had accepted the "separate but equal" doctrine; instead, they argued that Gaines had been denied an equal education. In an opinion by Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, the Court held that if Missouri gave whites the opportunity to attend law school in-state, it was required to do the same for blacks.

Houston returned to Washington in 1938, and Marshall assumed his position as special counsel the following year. He also became the director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc. (the Inc Fund), which had been established as a separate organization for tax purposes. In addition to litigating cases and arguing matters before the Supreme Court, he was responsible for raising money, managing the Inc Fund, and conducting public-relations work. Marshall litigated a number of cases involving unequal salaries for African Americans, winning nearly all of them; by 1945, he had ended salary disparities in major Southern cities and earned a reputation as a prominent figure in the civil rights movement. He also defended individuals who had been charged with crimes before both trial courts and the Supreme Court. Of the thirty-two civil rights cases that Marshall argued before the Supreme Court, he won twenty-nine. He and W. J. Durham wrote the brief in Smith v. Allwright (1944), in which the Court ruled the white primary unconstitutional, and he successfully argued both Morgan v. Virginia (1946), involving segregation on interstate buses, and a companion case to Shelley v. Kraemer (1948), involving racially restrictive covenants.

From 1939 to 1947, Marshall was a member of the Board of Directors of the American Civil Liberties Union. During that period, he aligned with the faction which favored a more absolutist defense of civil liberties. Most notably, unlike the majority of the Board, he was consistent in his opposition to Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066, which put Japanese Americans into concentration camps. Also, in contrast to most of the Board, Marshall charged that the prosecution of thirty-two right wing opponents of Roosevelt's pre-war foreign policy in the Sedition Trial of 1944 violated the First Amendment.

In the years after 1945, Marshall resumed his offensive against racial segregation in schools. Together with his Inc Fund colleagues, he devised a strategy that emphasized the inherent educational disparities caused by segregation rather than the physical differences between the schools provided for blacks and whites. The Court ruled in Marshall's favor in Sipuel v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma (1948), ordering that Oklahoma provide Ada Lois Sipuel with a legal education, although the justices declined to order that she be admitted to the state's law school for whites. In 1950, Marshall brought two cases involving education to the Court: McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Regents, which was George W. McLaurin's challenge to unequal treatment at the University of Oklahoma's graduate school, and Sweatt v. Painter, which was Heman Sweatt's challenge to his being required to attend a blacks-only law school in Texas. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of both McLaurin and Sweatt on the same day; although the justices did not overrule Plessy and the separate but equal doctrine, they rejected discrimination against African-American students and the provisions of schools for blacks that were inferior to those provided for whites.

Hayes, Marshall, and Nabit, smiling, stand outside the Supreme Court, with the inscription "Equal Justice Under Law" visible overhead
Marshall (center), George Edward Chalmer Hayes, and James Nabrit congratulate one another after the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education.

Marshall next turned to the issue of segregation in primary and secondary schools. The NAACP brought suit to challenge segregated schools in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Kansas, South Carolina, and Virginia, arguing both that there were disparities between the physical facilities provided for blacks and whites and that segregation was inherently harmful to African-American children. Marshall helped to try the South Carolina case. He called numerous social scientists and other expert witnesses to testify regarding the harms of segregation; these included the psychology professor Ken Clark, who testified that segregation in schools caused self-hatred among African-American students and inflicted damage that was "likely to endure as long as the conditions of segregation exist". The five cases eventually reached the Supreme Court and were argued in December 1952. In contrast to the oratorical rhetoric of his adversary—John W. Davis, a former solicitor general and presidential candidate—Marshall spoke plainly and conversationally. He stated that the only possible justification for segregation "is an inherent determination that the people who were formerly in slavery, regardless of anything else, shall be kept as near that stage as possible. And now is the time, we submit, that this Court should make clear that that is not what our Constitution stands for." On May 17, 1954, after internal disagreements and a 1953 reargument, the Supreme Court handed down its unanimous decision in Brown v. Board of Education, holding in an opinion by Chief Justice Earl Warren that: "in the field of public education the doctrine of 'separate but equal' has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal." When Marshall heard Warren read those words, he later said, "I was so happy I was numb".

The Court in Brown ordered additional arguments on the proper remedy for the constitutional violation that it had identified; in Brown II, decided in 1955, the justices ordered that desegregation proceed "with all deliberate speed". Their refusal to set a concrete deadline came as a disappointment to Marshall, who had argued for total integration to be completed by September 1956. In the years following the Court's decision, Marshall coordinated challenges to Virginia's "massive resistance" to Brown, and he returned to the Court to successfully argue Cooper v. Aaron (1958), involving Little Rock's attempt to delay integration. Marshall, who according to the legal scholar Mark Tushnet "gradually became a civil rights leader more than a civil rights lawyer", spent substantial amounts of time giving speeches and fundraising; in 1960, he accepted an invitation from Tom Mboya to help draft Kenya's constitution. By that year, Tushnet writes, he had become "the country's most prominent Supreme Court advocate".

Court of Appeals

President John F. Kennedy, who according to Tushnet "wanted to demonstrate his commitment to the interests of African Americans without incurring enormous political costs", nominated Marshall to be a judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit on September 23, 1961. The Second Circuit, which spanned New York, Vermont, and Connecticut, was at the time the nation's prominent appellate court. When Congress adjourned, Kennedy gave Marshall a recess appointment, and he took the oath of office on October 23.

Even after his recess appointment, Southern senators continued to delay Marshall's full confirmation for more than eight months. A subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee postponed his hearing several times, leading Senator Kenneth Keating, a New York Republican, to charge that the three-member subcommittee, which included two pro-segregation Southern Democrats, was biased against Marshall and engaged in unjustifiable delay. The subcommittee held several hearings between May and August 1962; Marshall faced harsh questioning from the Southerners over what the scholar Howard Ball described as "marginal issues at best". After further delays from the subcommittee, the full Judiciary Committee bypassed it and, by an 11–4 vote on September 7, endorsed Marshall's nomination. Following five hours of floor debate, the full Senate confirmed him by a 56–14 vote on September 11, 1962.

On the Second Circuit, Marshall authored 98 majority opinions, none of which was reversed by the Supreme Court, as well as 8 concurrences and 12 dissents. He dissented when a majority held in the Fourth Amendment case of United States ex rel. Angelet v. Fay (1964) that the Supreme Court's 1961 decision in Mapp v. Ohio (which held that the exclusionary rule applied to the states) did not apply retroactively, writing that the judiciary was "not free to circumscribe the application of a declared constitutional right". In United States v. Wilkins (1964), he concluded that the Fifth Amendment's protection against double jeopardy applied to the states; in People of the State of New York v. Galamison (1965), he dissented from a ruling upholding the convictions of civil rights protesters at the New York World's Fair. Marshall's dissents indicated that he favored broader interpretations of constitutional protections than did his colleagues.

Solicitor General

Marshall's nomination to the office of Solicitor General was widely viewed as a stepping stone to a Supreme Court appointment. Johnson pressured Southern senators not to obstruct Marshall's confirmation, and a hearing before a Senate subcommittee lasted only fifteen minutes; the full Senate confirmed him on August 11, 1965. As Solicitor General, Marshall won fourteen of the nineteen Supreme Court cases he argued. He later characterized the position as "the most effective job" and "maybe the best" job he ever had. Marshall argued in Harper v. Virginia State Board of Elections (1966) that conditioning the ability to vote on the payment of a poll tax was unlawful; in a companion case to Miranda v. Arizona (1966), he unsuccessfully maintained on behalf of the government that federal agents were not always required to inform arrested individuals of their rights. He defended the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 in South Carolina v. Katzenbach (1966) and Katzenbach v. Morgan (1966), winning both cases.

Supreme Court nomination

Main article: Thurgood Marshall Supreme Court nomination
Marshall meeting with President Lyndon B. Johnson in the Oval Office of the White House on the day that Marshall was nominated by Johnson to serve on the Supreme Court
President Johnson's remarks upon nominating Marshall to the Supreme Court, June 13, 1967
1967 Universal Newsreel footage covering Marshall's first day on the Supreme Court

In February 1967, Johnson nominated Ramsey Clark to be Attorney General. The nominee's father was Tom C. Clark, an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Fearing that his son's appointment would create substantial conflicts of interest for him, the elder Clark announced his resignation from the Court. For Johnson, who had long desired to nominate a non-white justice, the choice of a nominee to fill the ensuing vacancy "was as easy as it was obvious", according to the scholar Henry J. Abraham. Although the President briefly considered selecting William H. Hastie (an African-American appellate judge from Philadelphia) or a female candidate, he decided to choose Marshall. Johnson announced the nomination in the White House Rose Garden on June 13, declaring that Marshall "deserves the appointment ... I believe that it is the right thing to do, the right time to do it, the right man and the right place."

The public received the nomination favorably, and Marshall was praised by prominent senators from both parties. The Senate Judiciary Committee held hearings for five days in July. Marshall faced harsh criticism from such senators as Mississippi's James O. Eastland, North Carolina's Sam Ervin Jr., Arkansas's John McClellan, and South Carolina's Strom Thurmond, all of whom opposed the nominee's liberal jurisprudence. In what Time magazine characterized as a "Yahoo-type hazing", Thurmond asked Marshall over sixty questions about various minor aspects of the history of certain constitutional provisions. By an 11–5 vote on August 3, the committee recommended that Marshall be confirmed. On August 30, after six hours of debate, senators voted 69–11 to confirm Marshall to the Supreme Court. He took the constitutional oath of office on October 2, 1967, becoming the first African American to serve as a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.

Supreme Court

Photograph of Marshall
Marshall, 1967

Marshall remained on the Supreme Court for nearly twenty-four years, serving until his retirement in 1991. The Court to which he was appointed—the Warren Court—had a consistent liberal majority, and Marshall's jurisprudence was similar to that of its leaders, Chief Justice Warren and Justice William J. Brennan Jr. Although he wrote few major opinions during this period due to his lack of seniority, he was typically in the majority. As a result of four Supreme Court appointments by President Richard Nixon, however, the liberal coalition vanished. The Court under Chief Justice Warren Burger (the Burger Court) was not as conservative as some observers had anticipated, but the task of constructing liberal majorities case-by-case was left primarily to Brennan; Marshall's most consequential contributions to constitutional law came in dissent. The justice left much of his work to his law clerks, preferring to determine the outcome of the case and then allow the clerks to draft the opinion themselves. He took umbrage at frequent claims that he did no work and spent his time watching daytime soap operas; according to Tushnet, who clerked for Marshall, the idea that he "was a lazy Justice uninterested in the Court's work ... is wrong and perhaps racist". Marshall's closest colleague and friend on the Court was Brennan, and the two justices agreed so often that their clerks privately referred to them as "Justice Brennanmarshall". He also had a high regard for Warren, whom he described as "probably the greatest Chief Justice who ever lived".

Marshall consistently sided with the Supreme Court's liberal bloc. According to the scholar William J. Daniels: "His approach to justice was Warren Court–style legal realism ... In his dissenting opinions he emphasized individual rights, fundamental fairness, equal opportunity and protection under the law, the supremacy of the Constitution as the embodiment of rights and privileges, and the Supreme Court's responsibility to play a significant role in giving meaning to the notion of constitutional rights." Marshall's jurisprudence was pragmatic and relied on his real-world experience as a lawyer and as an African American. He disagreed with the notion (favored by some of his conservative colleagues) that the Constitution should be interpreted according to the Founders' original understandings; in a 1987 speech commemorating the Constitution's bicentennial, he said:

... I do not believe that the meaning of the Constitution was forever "fixed" at the Philadelphia Convention. Nor do I find the wisdom, foresight, and sense of justice exhibited by the framers particularly profound. To the contrary, the government they devised was defective from the start, requiring several amendments, a civil war, and momentous social transformation to attain the system of constitutional government, and its respect for the individual freedoms and human rights, that we hold as fundamental today ... "We the People" no longer enslave, but the credit does not belong to the framers. It belongs to those who refused to acquiesce in outdated notions of "liberty", "justice", and "equality", and who strived to better them ... I plan to celebrate the bicentennial of the Constitution as a living document, including the Bill of Rights and the other amendments protecting individual freedoms and human rights.

Equal protection and civil rights

Black-and-white photograph of the nine justices of the Supreme Court in their judicial robes
Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States, 1976. Marshall is in the bottom row, first from the right.

As the Court became increasingly conservative, Marshall found himself dissenting in numerous cases regarding racial discrimination. When the majority held in Milliken v. Bradley that a lower court had gone too far in ordering busing to reduce racial imbalances between schools in Detroit, he dissented, criticizing his colleagues for what he viewed as a lack of resolve to implement desegregation even when faced with difficulties and public resistance. In a dissent in City of Memphis v. Greene that according to Tushnet "demonstrated his sense of the practical reality that formed the context for abstract legal issues", he argued that a street closure that made it more difficult for residents of an African-American neighborhood to reach a city park was unconstitutional because it sent "a plain and powerful symbolic message" to blacks "that because of their race, they are to stay out of the all-white enclave ... and should instead take the long way around". Marshall felt that affirmative action was both necessary and constitutional; in an opinion in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, he commented that it was "more than a little ironic that, after several hundred years of class-based discrimination against Negroes, the Court is unwilling to hold that a class-based remedy for that discrimination is permissible". Dissenting in City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co., he rejected the majority's decision to strike down an affirmative-action program for government contractors, stating that he did "not believe that this Nation is anywhere close to eradicating racial discrimination or its vestiges".

Marshall's most influential contribution to constitutional doctrine was his "sliding-scale" approach to the Equal Protection Clause, which posited that the judiciary should assess a law's constitutionality by balancing its goals against its impact on groups and rights. Dissenting in Dandridge v. Williams, a case in which the majority upheld Maryland's $250-a-month cap on welfare payments against claims that it was insufficient for large families, he argued that rational basis review was not appropriate in cases involving "the literally vital interests of a powerless minority". In what Cass Sunstein described as the justice's greatest opinion, Marshall dissented when the Court in San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez upheld a system in which local schools were funded mainly through property taxes, arguing that the policy (which meant that poorer school districts obtained less money than richer ones) resulted in unconstitutional discrimination. His dissent in Harris v. McRae, in which the Court upheld the Hyde Amendment's ban on the use of Medicaid funds to pay for abortions, rebuked the majority for applying a "relentlessly formalistic catechism" that failed to take account of the amendment's "crushing burden on indigent women". Although Marshall's sliding-scale approach was never adopted by the Court as a whole, the legal scholar Susan Low Bloch comments that "his consistent criticism seems to have prodded the Court to somewhat greater flexibility".

Criminal procedure and capital punishment

Marshall supported the Warren Court's constitutional decisions on criminal law, and he wrote the opinion of the Court in Benton v. Maryland, which held that the Constitution's prohibition of double jeopardy applied to the states. After the retirements of Warren and Justice Hugo Black, however, "Marshall was continually shocked at the refusal" of the Burger and Rehnquist Courts "to hold police and those involved in the criminal justice system responsible for acting according to the language and the spirit of fundamental procedural guarantees", according to Ball. He favored a strict interpretation of the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement and opposed rulings that made exceptions to that provision; in United States v. Ross, for instance, he indignantly dissented when the Court upheld a conviction that was based on evidence discovered during a warrantless search of containers that had been found in an automobile. Marshall felt strongly that the Miranda doctrine should be expanded and fully enforced. In cases involving the Sixth Amendment, he argued that defendants must have competent attorneys; dissenting in Strickland v. Washington, Marshall (parting ways with Brennan) rejected the majority's conclusion that defendants must prove prejudice in ineffective assistance of counsel cases.

Marshall fervently opposed capital punishment throughout his time on the Court, arguing that it was cruel and unusual and therefore unconstitutional under the Eighth Amendment. He was the only justice with considerable experience defending those charged with capital crimes, and he expressed concern about the fact that injustices in death-penalty cases could not be remedied, often commenting: "Death is so lasting." In Furman v. Georgia, a case in which the Court struck down the capital-punishment statutes that were in force at the time, Marshall wrote that the death penalty was "morally unacceptable to the people of the United States at this time in their history" and that it "falls upon the poor, the ignorant, and the underprivileged members of society". When the Court in Gregg v. Georgia upheld new death-penalty laws that required juries to consider aggravating and mitigating circumstances, he dissented, describing capital punishment as a "vestigial savagery" that was immoral and violative of the Eighth Amendment. Afterwards, Marshall and Brennan dissented in every instance in which the Court declined to review a death sentence, filing more than 1,400 dissents that read: "Adhering to our views that the death penalty is in all circumstances cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, we would grant certiorari and vacate the death sentence in this case."

First Amendment

According to Ball, Marshall felt that the rights protected by the First Amendment were the Constitution's most important principles and that they could be restricted only for extremely compelling reasons. In a 1969 opinion in Stanley v. Georgia, he held that it was unconstitutional to criminalize the possession of obscene material. For the Court, he reversed the conviction of a Georgia man charged with possessing pornography, writing: "If the First Amendment means anything, it means that a State has no business telling a man, sitting alone in his own house, what books he may read or what films he may watch." In Amalgamated Food Employees Union Local 400 v. Logan Valley Plaza, he wrote for the Court that protesters had the right to picket on private property that was open to the public—a decision that was effectively overruled (over Marshall's dissent) four years later in Lloyd Corporation v. Tanner. He emphasized equality in his free speech opinions, writing in Chicago Police Dept. v. Mosley that "above all else, the First Amendment means that government has no power to restrict expression because of its messages, its ideas, its subject matter, or its content". Making comparisons to earlier civil rights protests, Marshall vigorously dissented in Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence, a case in which the Court ruled that the government could forbid homeless individuals from protesting poverty by sleeping overnight in Lafayette Park; although Burger decried their claims as "frivolous" attempts to "trivialize" the Constitution, Marshall argued that the protesters were engaged in constitutionally protected symbolic speech.

Marshall joined the majority in Texas v. Johnson and United States v. Eichman, two cases in which the Court held that the First Amendment protected the right to burn the American flag. He favored the total separation of church and state, dissenting when the Court upheld in Lynch v. Donnelly a city's display of a nativity scene and joining the majority in Wallace v. Jaffree to strike down an Alabama law regarding prayer in schools. On the issue of the free exercise of religion, Marshall voted with the majority in Wisconsin v. Yoder to hold that a school attendance law could not be constitutionally applied to the Amish, and he joined Justice Harry Blackmun's dissent when the Court in Employment Division v. Smith upheld a restriction on religious uses of peyote and curtailed Sherbert v. Verner's strict scrutiny standard. In the view of J. Clay Smith Jr. and Scott Burrell, the justice was "an unyielding supporter of civil liberties", whose "commitment to the values of the First Amendment was enhanced from actually realizing the historical consequences of being on the weaker and poorer side of power".

Privacy

In Marshall's view, the Constitution guaranteed to all citizens the right to privacy; he felt that although the Constitution nowhere mentioned such a right expressly, it could be inferred from various provisions of the Bill of Rights. He joined the majority in Eisenstadt v. Baird to strike down a statute that prohibited the distribution or sale of contraceptives to unmarried persons, dissented when the Court in Bowers v. Hardwick upheld an anti-sodomy law, and dissented from the majority's decision in Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health that the Constitution did not protect an unconditional right to die. On the issue of abortion rights, the author Carl T. Rowan comments that "no justice ever supported a woman's right to choice as uncompromisingly as Marshall did". He joined Blackmun's opinion for the Court in Roe v. Wade, which held that the Constitution protected a woman's right to have an abortion, and he consistently voted against state laws that sought to limit that right in cases such as Maher v. Roe, H. L. v. Matheson, Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists, and Webster v. Reproductive Health Services.

Other topics

During his service on the Supreme Court, Marshall participated in over 3,400 cases and authored 322 majority opinions. He was a member of the unanimous majority in United States v. Nixon that rejected President Nixon's claims of absolute executive privilege. Marshall wrote several influential decisions in the fields of corporate law and securities law, including a frequently-cited opinion regarding materiality in TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway, Inc. His opinions involving personal jurisdiction, such as Shaffer v. Heitner, were pragmatic and de-emphasized the importance of state boundaries. According to Tushnet, Marshall was "the Court's liberal specialist in Native American law"; he endeavored to protect Native Americans from regulatory action on the part of the states. He favored a rigid interpretation of procedural requirements, saying in one case that "rules mean what they say"—a position that in Tushnet's view was motivated by the justice's "traditionalist streak".

Like most Supreme Court justices, many of Marshall's law clerks went on to become prominent lawyers and legal scholars. His clerks included future Supreme Court justice Elena Kagan, U.S. circuit judge Douglas H. Ginsburg, and legal scholars Cass Sunstein, Mark Tushnet, and Martha Minow.

Personal life

Refer to caption
Marshall, his wife Cissy, and their children John (bottom left) and Thurgood Jr. (bottom right), 1965

Marshall wed Vivian "Buster" Burey on September 4, 1929, while he was a student at Lincoln University. They remained married until her death from cancer in 1955. Marshall married Cecilia "Cissy" Suyat, an NAACP secretary, eleven months later; they had two children: Thurgood Jr. and John. Thurgood Jr. became an attorney and worked in the Clinton administration, and John directed the U.S. Marshals Service and served as Virginia's secretary of public safety.

Marshall was an active member of the Episcopal Church and served as a delegate to its 1964 convention, walking out after a resolution to recognize a right to disobey immoral segregation laws was voted down. He was a Prince Hall Mason, attending meetings and participating in rituals. He refused to attend the Supreme Court's annual Christmas party believing that it infringed upon the separation of church and state.

Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who served with Marshall on the Supreme Court for a decade, wrote that "it was rare during our conference deliberations that he would not share an anecdote, a joke or a story"; although O'Connor initially treated the stories as "welcome diversions", she later "realized that behind most of the anecdotes was a relevant legal point".

Retirement, later life, and death

Gravestone reading "Thurgood Marshall / Associate Justice / 1967–1991 / United States Supreme Court / July 2, 1908 – January 24, 1993
Marshall's gravestone at Arlington National Cemetery

Marshall did not wish to retire—he frequently said "I was appointed to a life term, and I intend to serve it"—but he had been in ill health for many years, and Brennan's retirement in 1990 left him unhappy and isolated on the Court. The 82-year-old justice announced on June 27, 1991, that he would retire. When asked at a press conference what was wrong with him that would cause him to leave the Court, he replied: "What's wrong with me? I'm old. I'm getting old and coming apart!"

President George H. W. Bush (whom Marshall loathed) nominated Clarence Thomas, a conservative who had served in the Reagan and Bush administrations, to replace Marshall. His retirement took effect on October 1.

Marshall served as a visiting judge on the Second Circuit for a week in January 1992, and he received the American Bar Association's highest award in August of that year. His health continued to deteriorate, and, on January 24, 1993, at the Bethesda Naval Medical Center, he died of heart failure. He was 84 years old.

Marshall lay in repose in the Great Hall of the Supreme Court, and thousands thronged there to pay their respects; more than four thousand attended his funeral service at the National Cathedral. The civil rights leader Vernon E. Jordan said that Marshall had "demonstrat that the law could be an instrument of liberation", while Chief Justice William Rehnquist gave a eulogy in which he said: "Inscribed above the front entrance to the Supreme Court building are the words 'Equal justice under law'. Surely no one individual did more to make these words a reality than Thurgood Marshall." Marshall was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

Appraisal and legacy

Refer to caption
The Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse, renamed in Marshall's honor in 2001

According to the scholar Daniel Moak, Marshall "profoundly shaped the political direction of the United States", "transformed constitutional law", and "opened up new facets of citizenship to black Americans". For Tushnet, he was "probably the most important American lawyer of the twentieth century"; in the view of the political scientist Robert C. Smith, he was "one of the greatest leaders in the history of the African-American struggle for freedom and equality". A 1999 survey of black political scientists listed Marshall as one of the ten greatest African-American leaders in history; panelists described him as the "greatest jurist of the twentieth century" and stated that he "spearheaded the creation of the legal foundations of the civil rights movement". Scholars of the Supreme Court have not rated Marshall as highly as some of his colleagues: although his pre–Supreme Court legal career and his staunch liberalism have met with broad approval, a perception that he lacked substantial influence over his fellow justices has harmed his reputation. In Abraham's view, "he was one of America's greatest public lawyers, but he was not a great Supreme Court justice". A 1993 survey of legal scholars found that Marshall was ranked as the seventeenth-greatest justice of the Supreme Court—a rating that, while still lower than that of his fellow liberal justices, was substantially higher than was recorded in an earlier survey.

Marshall has received numerous tributes. The state of Maryland renamed Baltimore's airport the Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport in 2005, and the University of Maryland's law library is named in his honor. Buildings named for Marshall include New York's 590-foot-high Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse (renamed in 2001), where he heard cases as an appellate judge, and the federal judicial center in Washington. He is the namesake of streets and schools throughout the nation. Marshall posthumously received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Bill Clinton in 1993, and the United States Postal Service issued a commemorative stamp in his honor in 2003. He was depicted by Sidney Poitier in the 1991 television movie Separate but Equal, by Laurence Fishburne in George Stevens Jr.'s Broadway play Thurgood, and by Chadwick Boseman in the 2017 film Marshall.

See also

Notes

  1. Marshall was originally named "Thoroughgood" (his paternal grandfather's name), but he changed it to the briefer "Thurgood" when he was in the second grade.
  2. Thirty-two Republicans and thirty-seven Democrats voted to confirm Marshall; one Republican (Thurmond) and ten Southern Democrats voted against him. On the urging of Johnson, twenty Southerners did not cast a vote.
  3. In non-unanimous cases decided by an eight- or nine-justice court, Marshall and Brennan voted the same way 91.67% of the time during the Warren Court, 87.33% of the time during the Burger Court, and 94.86% of the time during the Rehnquist Court.

References

  1. ^ Ball, Howard (1998). A Defiant Life: Thurgood Marshall and the Persistence of Racism in America. New York: Crown Publishers. ISBN 978-0-517-59931-0.
  2. ^ Davis, Michael D.; Clark, Hunter R. (1992). Thurgood Marshall: Warrior at the Bar, Rebel on the Bench. Secaucas, New Jersey: Carol Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-55972-133-2.
  3. ^ Gibson, Larry S. (2012). Young Thurgood: The Making of a Supreme Court Justice. Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books. ISBN 978-1-61614-571-2.
  4. ^ Williams, Juan (1998). Thurgood Marshall: American Revolutionary. New York: Times Books. ISBN 978-0-8129-2028-4.
  5. ^ Tushnet, Mark (1997). "Thurgood Marshall". In Friedman, Leon; Israel, Fred L. (eds.). The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions. Vol. 4. New York: Chelsea House. pp. 1497–1519. ISBN 978-0-7910-1377-9.
  6. ^ Bloch, Susan Low (1993). "Thurgood Marshall". In Cushman, Clare (ed.). Supreme Court Justices: Illustrated Biographies. Washington, DC: CQ Press. pp. 476–480. ISBN 978-1-60871-832-0.
  7. ^ Tushnet, Mark V. (1994). Making Civil Rights Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1936–1961. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-508412-2.
  8. Schultz, David; Vile, John R., eds. (2005). The Encyclopedia of Civil Liberties in America. Abingdon, UK: Routledge. pp. 260–261. ISBN 978-0-7656-8063-1.
  9. ^ Bland, Randall W. (1993). Private Pressure on Public Law: The Legal Career of Justice Thurgood Marshall, 1934–1991 (Revised ed.). Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN 978-0-8191-8736-9.
  10. Beito, David T. (2023). The New Deal's War on the Bill of Rights: The Untold Story of FDR's Concentration Camps, Censorship, and Mass Surveillance (First ed.). Oakland: Independent Institute. pp. 183–184, 240. ISBN 978-1598133561.
  11. ^ Rowan, Carl T. (1993). Dream Makers, Dream Breakers: The World of Justice Thurgood Marshall. Boston: Little, Brown & Co. ISBN 978-0-316-75978-6.
  12. ^ Tushnet, Mark V. (1997). Making Constitutional Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1961–1991. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-509314-8.
  13. ^ Daniels, William J. (1991). "Justice Thurgood Marshall: The Race for Equal Justice". The Burger Court: Political and Judicial Profiles. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. pp. 212–237. ISBN 0-252-06135-7.
  14. ^ Abraham, Henry J. (1999). Justices, Presidents, and Senators: A History of the U.S. Supreme Court Appointments from Washington to Clinton. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-8476-9604-9.
  15. ^ Tushnet, Mark V. (2006). "Thurgood Marshall". In Urofsky, Melvin I. (ed.). Biographical Encyclopedia of the Supreme Court: The Lives and Legal Philosophies of the Justices. Washington, DC: CQ Press. pp. 334–339. ISBN 978-1-933116-48-8.
  16. Tushnet, Mark (August 1992). "Thurgood Marshall and the Brethren". Georgetown Law Journal. 80 (6): 2109–2130.
  17. Epstein, Lee J.; Segal, Jeffrey A.; Spaeth, Harold J.; Walker, Thomas G. (2021). The Supreme Court Compendium: Two Centuries of Data, Decisions, and Developments (7th ed.). Thousand Oaks, California: CQ Press. ISBN 978-1-0718-3456-5.
  18. Dickson, Del, ed. (2001). The Supreme Court in Conference, 1940–1985: The Private Discussions Behind Nearly 300 Supreme Court Decisions. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-512632-7.
  19. Marszalek, John F. (1992). "Marshall, Thurgood". In Lowery, Charles D.; Marszalek, John F. (eds.). Encyclopedia of African-American Civil Rights: From Emancipation to the Present. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. pp. 345–347. ISBN 0-313-25011-1.
  20. Hall, Timothy L. (2001). Supreme Court Justices: A Biographical Dictionary. New York: Facts on File. pp. 202–205. ISBN 978-0-8160-4194-7.
  21. Marshall, Thurgood (November 1987). "Reflections on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution". Harvard Law Review. 101 (1): 1–5. doi:10.2307/1341223. JSTOR 1341223.
  22. Bloch, Susan Low (1992). "Marshall, Thurgood". In Hall, Kermit L. (ed.). The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 526–528. ISBN 978-0-19-505835-2.
  23. ^ Ogletree, Charles J. (1989). "Justice Marshall's Criminal Justice Jurisprudence: 'The Right Thing to Do, the Right Time to Do It, the Right Man and the Right Place'". Harvard Blackletter Journal. 6: 111–130.
  24. Smith, J. Clay Jr; Burrell, Scott (Summer 1994). "Justice Thurgood Marshall and the First Amendment". Arizona State Law Journal. 26 (2): 461–478.
  25. Baugh, Joyce A. (Winter 1996). "Justice Thurgood Marshall: Advocate for Gender Justice". Western Journal of Black Studies. 20 (4): 195–206. ProQuest 1311811713.
  26. Zelden, Charles L. (March 2017). "'How Do You Feel about Writing Dissents'? Thurgood Marshall's Dissenting Vision for America". Journal of Supreme Court History. 42 (1): 77–100. doi:10.1111/jsch.12136. S2CID 151734746.
  27. Winter, Ralph K. (October 1991). "TM's Legacy" (PDF). Yale Law Journal. 101 (1): 25–29.
  28. Brown, DeNeen L. (August 19, 2016). "A Colorblind Love". The Washington Post. pp. B2. ProQuest 1812382061. Retrieved August 11, 2022.
  29. O'Connor, Sandra Day (Summer 1992). "Thurgood Marshall: The Influence of a Raconteur". Stanford Law Review. 44 (6): 1217–1220. doi:10.2307/1229051. JSTOR 1229051.
  30. ^ Atkinson, David N. (1999). Leaving the Bench: Supreme Court Justices at the End. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0946-8.
  31. Biskupic, Joan; Witt, Elder (1997). Guide to the U.S. Supreme Court (3rd ed.). Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly. ISBN 978-1-56802-130-0.
  32. Labaton, Stephen (January 29, 1993). "Thousands Fill Cathedral To Pay Tribute to Marshall". The New York Times. pp. A16. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
  33. Moak, Daniel (2020). "Thurgood Marshall: The Legacy and Limits of Equality under the Law". In Rogers, Melvin L.; Turner, Jack (eds.). African American Political Thought. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 386–412. doi:10.7208/9780226726076-018 (inactive November 1, 2024). ISBN 978-0-226-72607-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)
  34. Smith, Robert C. (2003). Encyclopedia of African American Politics. New York: Facts on File. ISBN 978-1-4381-3019-4.
  35. Smith, Robert C. (2001). "Rating Black Leaders" (PDF). National Political Science Review. 8: 124–138.
  36. ^ Ross, William G. (Winter 1996). "The Ratings Game: Factors That Influence Judicial Reputation". Marquette Law Review. 79 (2): 402–452.
  37. ^ Gilmore, Brian (Summer 2008). "Lawyer of the Century: Thurgood Marshall's Legacy Looms Large in a World He Helped to Create". The Crisis. pp. 20–23.
  38. Bloch, Susan Low (2009). "Celebrating Thurgood Marshall: The Prophetic Dissenter". Howard Law Journal. 52 (3): 617–635.
  39. ^ Williams, Pete (October 10, 2017). "Film Marks 50th Anniversary of Thurgood Marshall's Supreme Court Arrival". NBC News. Retrieved August 13, 2022.
  40. Resnik, Judith (Summer 2012). "Building the Federal Judiciary (Literally and Legally): The Monuments of Chief Justices Taft, Warren and Rehnquist". Indiana Law Journal. 87 (3): 823–950.
  41. Paulsen, Michael Stokes; Paulsen, Luke (2015). The Constitution: An Introduction. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-05371-1.
  42. Roberts, Roxanne (February 1, 2003). "A Man Who Pushed The Envelope: Thurgood Marshall Commemorated With A Stamp and a Soiree". The Washington Post. pp. C1. ProQuest 409524819. Retrieved August 14, 2022.
  43. Rollins, Peter C. (2003). The Columbia Companion to American History on Film: How the Movies Have Portrayed the American Past. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-50839-1.
  44. Marks, Peter (May 31, 2010). "Serving Justice Onstage: Laurence Fishburne is Supremely Pleased to Perform 'Thurgood' in Washington". The Washington Post. pp. C1. ProQuest 347793653. Retrieved August 14, 2022.

Further reading

Historiography and memory

Primary sources

  • Marshall, Thurgood (1950). "Mr. Justice Murphy and Civil Rights." 48 Michigan Law Review 745.
  • Marshall, Thurgood (1987). "Reflections on the bicentennial of the United States Constitution." Harvard Law Review 101: 1+ online.
  • Marshall, Thurgood (1987). "The Constitution's Bicentennial: Commemorating the Wrong Document" Vanderbilt Law Review 40: 1337+ online.
  • Tushnet, Mark V. ed. (2001). Thurgood Marshall: His Speeches, Writings, Arguments, Opinions, and Reminiscences. excerpt

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