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  1. April 22, 1950. Place of Burial: Suitland, MD. Cemetery Name: Lincoln Memorial Cemetery. While Charles Hamilton Houston did not actively argue the Brown decision, he is given credit for laying the ground work that led to the NAACP strategy. Houston has been called “The Man who Killed Jim Crow” for his work in helping to end segregation.

  2. 8 de mar. de 2017 · Als Anwalt Charles Hamilton Houston die Ungleichheit der Segregation aufzeigen wollte, präsentierte er nicht nur Argumente in einem Gerichtssaal. Während er Brown gegen das Board of Education argumentierte, nahm Houston eine Kamera in ganz South Carolina, um Beispiele für Ungleichheit zu identifizieren, die in öffentlichen Schulen von Afroamerikanern und Weißen besteht.

  3. In the fall of 1924, Professor Charles Houston began teaching “Agency,” “Surety and Mortgages,” “Jurisprudence,” and “Administrative Law” to first- and second-year law students at Howard. Houston demanded a lot from his students.

  4. Biography. “A lawyer’s either a social engineer, or he’s a parasite on society,” wrote Charles Hamilton Houston. Though trained as an attorney, he proved to be a formidable social engineer, establishing the strategy that ultimately took down the legal foundations of segregation in the United States, particularly in the field of education.

  5. 22 de feb. de 2023 · Lawyer Charles Hamilton Houston’s Notable Achievements. Written by MasterClass. Last updated: Feb 22, 2023 • 4 min read. Charles Hamilton Houston was an educator and lawyer who helped train a generation of Black lawyers and won cases that helped prove racial segregation unconstitutional.

  6. 7 de dic. de 2020 · This video is about how Charles Hamilton Houston laid the foundations for the historic 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education Topeka, KS decision. Everyone rememb...

    • 57 min
    • 39.8K
    • THE HISTORICAL MEMORY RECOVERY CHANNEL
  7. Lieutenant Houston in Artillery Unit, World War I. During World War I, Houston was an artillery officer in France. He witnessed and endured the racial prejudice inflicted on black soldiers. These encounters fueled his determination to use the law as an instrument of social change. (Lent by Charles Hamilton Houston Jr.) Back to Charles Hamilton ...