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Counsel for the Situation

Shaping the Law to Realize America's Promise

Counsel for the Situation( )
Author: Coleman, William T.
Coleman, William T.
As told to: Bliss, Donald T.
ISBN:978-0-8157-0488-1
Publication Date:Oct 2010
Publisher:Brookings Institution Press
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $35.99
Book Description:

"

""Bill Coleman's story is one that younger generations should mark and inwardly digest, lest they forget the pioneers who helped to make a better America possible."" --From the Foreword by Stephen G. Breyer

William Coleman has spent a lifetime opening doors and breaking down barriers. He has been an eyewitness to history; moreover, he has made history. This is his inspiring story, in his own words.

Americans of color faced daunting barriers in the 1940s....
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Book Details
Pages:450
Detailed Subjects: Law / Legal Profession
Biography & Autobiography / Lawyers & Judges
Political Science / Public Affairs & Administration
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.5 x 9.53 x 1.25 Inches
Book Weight:1.938 Pounds
Author Biography
Coleman, William T. (Author)
William Thaddeus Coleman Jr. was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on July 7, 1920. He received bachelor's degrees in political science and economics from the University of Pennsylvania in 1941. He was accepted into the Harvard School of Law but left in 1943 to enlist in the Army Air Corps. He spent part of his service as a defense team member in court-martial proceedings. He returned to Harvard after World War II, was the first black staff member of The Harvard Law Review, and graduated first in his class in 1947. After law school, he was a law secretary to a federal appeals court judge in Philadelphia. After the clerkship, he worked for law firms in New York and Philadelphia.

In 1951, Thurgood Marshall asked him to join the legal team preparing the briefs in Brown v. Board of Education. Those arguments contributed to the court's unanimous declaration that state laws that established separate schools for black and white students were unconstitutional in 1954. Ten years later, he argued a case that led to a Supreme Court decision establishing the constitutionality of racially mixed sexual relations and cohabitation. He became the second African-American to serve in a White House cabinet when President Gerald R. Ford appointed him Secretary of the Department of Transportation in March 1975. In 1982, he argued that segregated private schools should be barred from receiving federal tax exemptions and the Supreme Court agreed. He argued 19 cases before the Supreme Court altogether. In 1995, President Bill Clinton presented him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. His memoir, Counsel for the Situation: Shaping the Law to Realize America's Promise written with Donald T. Bliss, was published in 2010. He died on March 31, 2017 at the age of 96.

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