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Louise Thomas Case, 1924 Louise Thomas Case, 1924
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Personal Injury Suits Personal Injury Suits
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Desegregation Cases, 1924 Desegregation Cases, 1924
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One The Origin of a New Negro Lawyer, 1898–1924
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Published:May 2010
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Abstract
Born on October 13, 1898, Raymond Pace Alexander grew up in Philadelphia, where he witnessed rampant racism. His parents, Hillard Boone Alexander and Virginia Pace Alexander, were part of the first wave of blacks who migrated out of the Deep and Upper South between the end of Reconstruction and the turn of the twentieth century. Alexander believed that African Americans contributed to American history and rejected the view that people of African descent were inferior to whites. This chapter examines the social forces that shaped Alexander and the New Negro Lawyer generation in the years 1898–1924. It considers Alexander’s social, educational, and intellectual influences as he made the transition from a working-class African American youth to a well-trained black professional. It also discusses his encounter with segregation and discrimination, and how his understanding of black history and culture strengthened him. Finally, it looks at Alexander’s active involvement in African American social and political organizations as well as white professional organizations.
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