Английская Википедия:Curtis Cavielle Taylor

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description Curtis Cavielle Taylor (1896–1967) was an African American pioneering criminal attorney and civil rights lawyer.[1][2][3] He was nicknamed, "The Black Clarence Darrow".[4] Taylor lived in Los Angeles, California.[5][6]

Biography

Curtis Cavielle Taylor was born in 1896 in Edna, Jackson County, Texas.[7] His cousin was Hobart Taylor.[8] He graduated from Prairie View A&M University (1917); and Howard University Law School (1926).[1][9]

Taylor was admitted to the State Bar of California in March 1927 and opened up a private legal practice in Los Angeles.[1] He wrote a news column, "Pertinent Personalities" for The Pacific Defender newspaper around 1927.[10] He married Lotus Blossom Roberts on April 11, 1940 in Yuma, Arizona.[11]

His involvement in the Rush Griffin murder case of 1934, led to a statute regarding stays for capital cases in California.[1][12] He was one of the lawyers in 1938 for George Farley, who killed two Deputy Marshals when they came to his house to evict him.[13] In 1958, Taylor was shot in his office by Warren Willie Stroud. Taylor was representing Stroud's wife who was filing a court case for spousal abuse.[14][15] He survived the shooting.[15]

In 1959, Taylor was honored with the alumni award during the convocation address at Prairie View A&M University.[16] Judge Earl C. Broady, who began his legal career working in Taylor's office, gave a million dollar gift to Howard University in 1987 in his honor.[7] The UCLA Library has numerous photos of him with other prominent African Americans in their archival collection.[17]

Death and legacy

Taylor died in September 1967 at Sawtelle Veterans Administration Hospital in Los Angeles, California.[8]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Authority control