Ossian Sweet | |
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Born | October 30, 1895 Bartow, Florida, U.S. |
Died | March 20, 1960 (aged 64) Detroit, Michigan, U.S. |
Alma mater | Howard University Wilberforce University |
Scientific career |
Partner at Goodman, Crockett, Eden & Robb, the first racially inte-grated law firm in the U.S., 1950. Not pictured: John C. McLeod— First black lawyer to practice in Michigan before 1870. John T. Letts—First black judge elected in Kent County, Grand Rapids Municipal Court, 1959; elected to the Kent County Circuit Court, 1967.
Dec 22, 2021 · Dawn Ison has faced her share of obstacles in life, and she hopes those experiences can help her in her new role as the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan. She is the first Black ...
Feb 26, 2022 · DETROIT – If confirmed, Ketanji Brown Jackson will make history as the first Black woman appointed to the Supreme Court. On Friday (Feb. 25), Black attorneys in Metro Detroit not only applauded ...
Sep 13, 2016 · Judge Nathaniel R. Jones, 2016. Jones was the NAACP General Counsel who pursued the Bradley versus Milliken case. In 1969, Jones had just been hired as the top lawyer of the NAACP. With the new law in Michigan, Detroit became a target for a desegregation lawsuit. The case became known as Bradley versus Milliken.
He moved to South Carolina after the American Civil War to practice law and was elected as a judge in 1873 and again in 1876....Macon Bolling AllenOther namesAllen Macon BollingOccupationLawyer, judgeKnown forFirst African-American lawyer and Justice of the PeaceSpouse(s)Emma Allen; Hannah Allen4 more rows
Aware of ongoing tensions over race but insistent upon his rights to home ownership, Ossian Sweet moved into a new home on Garland Avenue, an all white neighborhood, in September 1925. He brought his brothers Otis and Henry and several friends for protection.Jul 18, 2007
It was located on Detroit's near east side, bounded by Gratiot Avenue, Brush Street, the Detroit River, and the Grand Trunk railroad tracks.
Ossian Sweet and his family were arrested and charged with the murder of one member of a white mob which tried to shoot at the Sweet home. The NAACP enlisted the aid of famed attorney Clarence Darrow who came here to defend the Sweets at the trial held near this building.
Sweet married Gladys Mitchell in 1922. Born in Pittsburgh, she grew up in Detroit, a few miles north of Garland Street. She came from a prominent middle-class black family. In 1923, Sweet temporarily left his practice for further medical studies in Vienna and Paris; his wife accompanied him.
One of the bullets struck thirty-three-year-old Leon Breiner in the back as he stood on the porch of 2914 Garland, talking to friends. Breiner's last words were, "Boys, they've shot me." Police covered Breiner with a blanket and took him away. Nearby, another man, Eric Houghberg, lay with a bullet wound to the leg.
During World War I, Black Bottom was home to many Eastern European Jewish immigrants, but with the Great Migration and influx of southern African Americans, it became one of Detroit's most lively black neighborhoods.
Idlewild became a major entertainment hub, hosting performances by Black megastars from Della Reese to Jackie Wilson to the Temptations to Aretha Franklin in the '50s and '60s.Oct 10, 2020
The African-American choreographer Billy Pierce, who is credited on "Black Bottom Dance" sheet music with having introduced the dance, was an associate with the African-American choreographer Buddy Bradley.
Davis, John Lotting and Hewitt Watson, late of said City of Detroit, m said county, heretofore, to-wit on the gth day of September, A.D. 1925, at the said City of Detroit in the county aforesaid, feloniously, willfully and of their malice aforethought, did kill and murder one Leon E.
SIGNIFICANCE: The Sweet trials revealed the growing racial tension in northern and Midwestern cities following World War I, and provided a dress rehearsal for more such episodes during the Civil Rights era 30 years later.
In the Sweet case (1925–26), he won acquittal for a black family that had fought against a mob trying to expel it from its residence in a white neighbourhood in Detroit.