Julius Chambers, a Charlotte, N.C., civil rights attorney who successfully brought eight cases before the Supreme Court, died Friday at age 76, the Associated Press reports. Chambers, a former director-counsel and president of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, was chancellor of North Carolina Central University from 1993 to 2001. He is survived by two children, three grandchildren and a brother.
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In 1964, Mr. Chambers opened the practice that became the stateโs first integrated law firm. The Charlotte Observer reported that Mr. Chambers took eight cases before the U.S. Supreme Court and won them all, including the Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education school busing case.
The 1971 Supreme Court ruling in Swann mandated crosstown busing and highlighted the power of federal courts to intervene when public school systems hedged en route to full integration.ย
โChambers probably, being one of those lawyers rooted in the South, was able to see the inequities more clearly because they were so stark here in the late โ60s and โ70s,โ Geraldine Sumter, a law partner at Mr. Chambersโs firm, said.
Read more at the Washington Post and the NAACP LDF.
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