The first woman did not join the Supreme Court until 1981. Then-President Ronald Reagan fulfilled his campaign pledge to place a woman on that court. Conservatives applauded Reagan’s nomination of a woman. Yet today, conservatives bash Biden for his campaign pledge to nominate a (Black) woman to the Supreme Court.
Given the fact that Black women have a legacy of proficiency in the law, claims that the paucity of Black women in the federal judiciary arises from their lack of competence is fraudulent.
In 1791, Lucy Terry Prince, a non-lawyer and freed slave, became the first Black woman to successfully argue a case before a Supreme Court Justice. Prince’s powerful presentation in a dispute over land she and her husband owned in Vermont led then-Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase to credit her as better than any Vermont lawyer he ever heard.
Constance Baker Motley, the first Black female federal judge, argued 10 cases before the Supreme Court as a lawyer, winning nine. Motley, an Ivy League law school grad, assisted on nearly 60 other cases that reached the Supreme Court. Motley began her legal career as a lawyer for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund where her mentor was the legendary Thurgood Marshall, the first Black man to serve on the Supreme Court.
The NAACP Defense Fund’s campaign against legalized segregation included lawsuits that ended discriminatory exclusion at many law schools.
Little is known about the legal career of Mary Shadd Cary, a lifelong activist for civil rights and women’s rights who died in 1893. Cary is better known by the “first” she achieved 30 years before her law school graduation. She became the first Black woman to found and operate a newspaper anywhere in North America.
A line from a letter Cary wrote in 1848 has resonance today for efforts to increase the number of Black women at all levels of the federal judiciary. If America is truly a nation of equal justice and equal opportunity, then, as Cary wrote, “We should do more and talk less.”
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Linn Washington Jr. is a journalism professor at Temple University. He is the author of “Black Judges On Justice,” the first book to present in-depth interviews with Black jurists.