- Murphy Bell
Infobox Person
name = Murphy Wilbert Bell
image_size =
caption = Murphy Bell
birth_date = birth date |1921|3|27
birth_place = Baton Rouge,East Baton Rouge Parish ,Louisiana , USA
death_date = death date and age|2008|6|11|1921|3|27
death_place =Baton Rouge
occupation =Attorney
spouse= Edna Alfra Tea Bell (1920-2004; married, 1944-her death)
children= Murphy Fairfax Bell, Sr.
Cynthia Bell Watson
Edna Tea Bell Boyd
religion=Episcopal
party=Democratic
footnotes=(1) Bell was among the leading figures in thecivil rights movement within his native Baton Rouge,Louisiana .(2) In 1972, Bell joined the radical lawyer
William Kunstler to represent black activistH. Rap Brown on gun violations charges.Murphy Wilbert Bell (
March 27 ,1921 –June 11 ,2008 ) was anAfrican American attorney from Baton Rouge,Louisiana , who was active in thecivil rights movement of the 1950s through the 1970s. In 1972, Bell and radical attorneyWilliam Kunstler ofNew York City represented the black activistH. Rap Brown on federal gun violations, which led to Brown's going underground. Brown has since been sentenced to federal prison withoutparole in a separatehomicide case. [cite web|url = http://abunooralirlandee.wordpress.com/2008/02/22/william-kunstler-on-jamil-al-amin-h-rap-brown/ |title = William Kunstler on Jamil Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown) « Abu Noor Al-Irlandee |accessdate = 2008-06-23] Bell also represented theCongress of Racial Equality , founded byJames Farmer, Jr. , inChicago in 1942.cite web|url = http://www.legacy.com/theadvocate/DeathNotices.asp?Page=Lifestory&PersonId=111561362 |title = 2theadvocate.com | Obituaries |accessdate = 2008-06-23]Bell was born in Baton Rouge to Lucas Bell and the former Elnora Butler. He attended Perkins Elementary School and graduated from
historically black McKinley High School. He studied at the large historically black institutionSouthern University in Baton Rouge, where he received bothbachelor of science andJuris Doctorate degrees. He was inducted into the Southern University Law School Hall of Fame and was honored among the "Golden Alumni" during the 2007 commencement ceremonies..Known affectionately to family and friends as "Daddee", Bell early in life joined the Mount Zion First
Baptist Church, under pastor Gardner C. Taylor. In 1944, he married the former Edna Alfra Tea (March 23 ,1920 –December 15 ,2004 ) [ [http://ssdi.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi Social Security Death Index Interactive Search ] ] of Boyce in northernRapides Parish . The couple had three children: Cynthia Bell Watson and husband Mercellus, of Shreveport, and Murphy Fairfax Bell, Sr., and wife Jacqueline, and Edna Tea Bell Boyd, all of Baton Rouge. Bell had four grandchildren, including Murphy F. Bell, Jr. He remained with Mount Zion under the leadership of the Reverend T.J. Jemison until he joined St. Michael's Episcopal Church, also in Baton Rouge.He was affiliated with the Louis Martinet Legal Society, the National Bar Association, and the American Bar Association. He was a
United States Navy veteran ofWorld War II , having served in the Pacific Theater. He was a member of theMasonic lodge andKappa Alpha Psi fraternity.Bell began his career in the private practice of law in 1957 and went on to present cases before the Louisiana Court of Appeal,
Louisiana Supreme Court , and theUnited States Supreme Court . He was formerly the director of theEast Baton Rouge Parish public defender’s office and the director of Capital Area Legal Services. Southern Law Center Chancellor Freddie Pitcher, Jr., lauded Bell's determined defense of civil rights leaders: :I would rank Murphy as one of the top lawyers in Baton Rouge — black or white. I always admired how he went to the wall in representing his clients,” Pitcher said. [http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/19937054.html?index=1&c=y 2theadvocate.com | News | Civil-rights attorney Murphy Bell, 87, dies — Baton Rouge, LA ] ]In 1971, Bell ran unsuccessfully as a Democrat for the Louisiana House of Representatives. At the time, he declared his belief in “ total service, total commitment to the eradication of unequal justice and unequal opportunity in our great nation.”
Bell fought to
desegregate school districts around Louisiana. He also defended Emmit J. Douglas, a former stateNAACP president who was arrested in 1970 after having attempted to dine in an all-white establishment in Baton Rouge. Bell also was a former NAACP president. [ [http://www.ktbs.com/news/Civil-rights-attorney-Murphy-Bell-87-dies-13122/ Civil-rights attorney Murphy Bell, 87, dies ] ]In 1980, Bell sued the City of Baton Rouge and
East Baton Rouge Parish District Attorney Ossie Brown regarding the accidental police shooting death of a black teenager, Clarence Morrison, Jr.. In the suit, which failed, Bell claimed that Brown had used the investigative procedures of the DA's office as "legal backup" to cover for police error. [http://bulk.resource.org/courts.gov/c/F2/614/614.F2d.77.79-2532.html]Bell died in Baton Rouge, two weeks after having been diagnosed with
pancreatic cancer . [cite web|url = http://web.subr.edu/index.php?id=146&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=160&tx_ttnews%5BbackPid%5D=547&cHash=87b28ed411 |title = SUBR.edu: News |accessdate = 2008-06-23 |author = ] Services were held onJune 17 at St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, with the Reverend Stewart B. Cage, Jr., officiating. Interment was inPort Hudson National Cemetery .Bell's death occurred five days after the passing of another Louisiana civil rights pioneer, former ShreveportCity Council manHerman Farr , aBaptist clergy man who served from 1978–1982.http://m.shreveporttimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080611/OBITUARIES01/806110341/1045/OBITUARIES&template=wapart]References
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