- Frederick B. Abramson
Frederick B. Abramson, (born in
New York, New York , 1935; died inWashington D.C. ,June 1 ,1991 ), has a lengthy and distinguished career in the Washington D.C. legal community, including service as President of the District of Columbia Bar from June of 1985 to June of 1986.Abramson was raised in
Harlem - his father was anelevator operator , and his mother was a food service worker - but he attended a program for gifted students atStuyvesant High School , before transferring toCornwall Academy inConnecticut after receiving a scholarship that his sister had seen advertised in theAmsterdam News . He was the firstAfrican-American student to attend Cornwall, and later became one of only four African-American students in his class atYale University , from which he graduated in 1956, also after receiving a scholarship. Although his first ambition was to teach English, Abramson went on to earn hisJuris Doctor from theUniversity of Chicago School of Law in 1959, and a few years later settled in Washington, D.C., where he would practicelaw and participate in the governance of the legal profession for the rest of his life.After stints in the
United States Justice Department and with theU.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission , Abramson went into private practice. He was one of the first black associates in a major Washington law firm while working for the firm ofArnold & Porter from 1969 to 1973, when he become a partner inRollinson & Schaumberg . In 1977, Abramson became a partner inSachs, Greenebaum & Taylor , where he would remain until 1990. In January of 1991, he became the first African-American head of the Office of Bar Counsel for the D.C. Court of Appeals, supervising investigations of attorneys alleged to have violated the Rules ofProfessional Responsibility . He held the position for only five months before succumbing topneumonia at the age of 56.At the time of his death Abramson was also Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the
District of Columbia Law School . Among the other civic commitments undertaken by Abramson:* Nine years on the D.C. Judicial Nomination Commission, four as Chair
* Member of the ABA Commission on Opportunities for Minorities
* Member of the ABA Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary
* Member of the board of directors of the Washington Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights under Law
* Member of the board of directors of the D.C. Public Defender Service
* Member of the board of directors of the National Women's Law Center.
* Member of the board of directors of Century National Bank of Washington.
Abramson's untimely death prompted members of the District's legal community to create the
Frederick B. Abramson Memorial Foundation , which provides opportunities for young African-American men and women to further their education.Quotations
"My parents brought me up to believe in honesty, hard work and achievement. Most of my life growing up was spent on one block. It was the rough section of Harlem with the notorious 146th Street gangs. My parents knew this was a setting fraught with danger. So they instilled discipline."
External links
* [http://www.abramsonfoundation.org/ Website of the Frederick B. Abramson Memorial Foundation]
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