- Julius L. Chambers
Infobox revolution biography
name=Julius L. Chambers
dateofbirth=birth date|1936|10|6|mf=y
placeofbirth=Mount Gilead,North Carolina
dateofdeath=
placeofdeath=
caption=Julius Chambers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,February 13 ,2007
alternate name=
movement=African-American Civil Rights Movement
organizations=NAACP ,Legal Defense Fund
monuments=
prizes=
religion=
influences=Thurgood Marshall
influenced=
footnotes=Julius LeVonne Chambers (born
October 6 ,1936 inMount Gilead, North Carolina ) is an American lawyer, civil rights leader, and educator.=Early Life=Julius Chambers grew up during the
Jim Crow era in ruralMontgomery County, North Carolina . As a child, Chambers saw first hand the effects of discrimination when his father's auto repair business became a target of racial injustice in 1948. A white customer refused to pay his father and his father could not afford a lawyer to file suit against the man. Chambers has said that this experience made him resolved to pursue a career in law - in order to help end segregation and racial discrimination. [ [http://www.unctv.org/biocon/jchambers/part1.html Biographical Conversations with Julius Chambers from UNC-TV] ] After graduating from high school in 1954 (the same month as the landmarkBrown v. Board of Education ruling), he enrolled atNorth Carolina Central University . He was the president of the student body at NCCU and graduatedsumma cum laude with a B.A. in history in 1958. He then earned an M.A. in history from theUniversity of Michigan . In 1959, Chambers entered law school at theUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill . He was the firstAfrican American editor-in-chief of the school's law review and graduated first in his class of 100 students in 1962. Chambers also became the first African American to gain membership in theOrder of the Golden Fleece , the University's highest honorary society. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=khNXIuugPOkC&pg=PA109&lpg=PA109&dq=chambers+stein+charlotte+bomb&source=web&ots=hbGzeHaQ14&sig=niSf9Ki8OV1yfgE8Xj3mXzurRGw&hl=en Douglas, Davison M. "Reading, Writing & Race: The Desegregation of the Charlotte Schools."] ] In 1964, he went on to earn hisLL.M. fromColumbia University Law School . During this period, from 1963-1964, Chambers also served as the first intern for theNAACP Legal Defense Fund (LDF) in New York, having been selected by LDF's Director-Counsel Thurgood Marshall. [ [http://www.thehistorymakers.com/biography/biography.asp?bioindex=364 Biographical Conversations with Julius Chambers from UNC-TV] ]=Law practice in Charlotte=
In June 1964, Chambers began a solo law practice in Charlotte, North Carolina - a firm which eventually became the first integrated firm in North Carolina history. With fellow founding partners
James E. Ferguson II andAdam Stein , along with lawyers from LDF, the firm successfully litigated a number of key cases before theSupreme Court of the United States that would help to shape evolving American civil rights laws, including: the school busing decision in "Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education " (1971); and two important Title VII employment discrimination cases "Griggs v. Duke Power Co. " (1971) and "Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody " (1975). [ [http://www.thehistorymakers.com/biography/biography.asp?bioindex=364 Biography of Julius Chambers from "The History Makers"] ]The firm's efforts were met several times with violence from white supremacists. While Chambers was at a speaking engagement in January 1965 in
New Bern, North Carolina his car was destroyed by a bomb. On November 22, 1965, in the midst of the first hearings of the "Swann" school busing case, Chambers's home was bombed along with three other homes of African American leaders: then North CarolinaNAACP PresidentKelly Alexander , his brotherFrederick Alexander (a Charlotte city councilman) and community activistReginald Hawkins . Amazingly, no one was injured in these bombings. The bombings received a great deal of national television and newspaper coverage, including an article in theNew York Times . In February 1971, Chambers's downtown Charlotte law office was also firebombed. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=khNXIuugPOkC&pg=PA109&lpg=PA109&dq=chambers+stein+charlotte+bomb&source=web&ots=hbGzeHaQ14&sig=niSf9Ki8OV1yfgE8Xj3mXzurRGw&hl=en Douglas, Davison M. "Reading, Writing & Race: The Desegregation of the Charlotte Schools."] ]=NAACP Legal Defense Fund=
In 1984, he left the Charlotte firm to again join the NAACP Legal Defense Fund in New York City, this time as its highest executive (Director-Counsel). Under Chambers’ leadership, the LDF litigated cases in the areas of education, voting rights, capital punishment, employment, housing and prisons. During this period, the LDF was perhaps best known for its work in defense of
affirmative action programs of the 1970s and 1980s.=Career as Educator=
Chambers has also had an active career as an educator. In 1993, he left New York (and his position with the LDF) to return to North Carolina in order to become the chancellor of his
alma mater , North Carolina Central University. Under his administration, the University launched a $50 million capital fundraising campaign and established its first endowed chairs. He served as chancellor until June 30, 2001.Chambers has also served as lecturer or
adjunct professor at a number of law schools, including:Harvard Law (1965),University of Virginia Law School (1975-1978),University of Pennsylvania Law School (1978-1986),Columbia University Law School (1984-1992), andUniversity of Michigan Law School (1985-1992). [ [http://www.answers.com/topic/julius-chambers Julius Chambers biography from Answers.com] ]=Publications=
Chambers has authored or contributed to a number of important articles and books on civil rights law, including: “Beyond Affirmative Action” (1998), "Race and Equality: The Still Unfinished Business of the Warren Court,” "The Warren Court: A Retrospective" (1996), “Afterward: Racial Equity and Full Citizenship, The Unfinished Agenda,” "African Americans and the Living Constitution" (1996), “Black Americans and the Courts: Has the Clock Been Turned Back Permanently?,” "The State of Black America" (1990), and “Adequate Education for All: A Right, An Achievable Goal” (1987). [ [http://www.fergusonstein.com/Attorneys/julius_chambers.htm Julius L. Chambers attorney profile] ]
=Personal Life=
Chambers is married to Vivian Giles Chambers and has two adult children, Derrick and Judy, and two granddaughters. He is currently in private law practice in Charlotte, North Carolina with the multi-specialty law firm Ferguson Stein Chambers Gresham & Sumter, P.A.
=References=
Julius Chamber was also balck and american.
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