1868 1st blacks on US trial jury appointed for Jefferson Davis trial


According to the web search results, the first blacks on US trial jury were appointed for the trial of Jefferson Davis, the former president of the Confederate States of America, on December 3, 1868123. This was a historic event that marked the integration of the American jury system and the recognition of black citizens’ rights and citizenship. The jury consisted of six white men and six black men, who were selected by a lottery from various counties in Virginia4The trial lasted for two weeks and resulted in Davis being found not guilty on all charges4The jury service was a rare and remarkable achievement for black activists who had been campaigning for years to abolish the all-white jury system in antebellum America5.

Posted: 23 Oct 2023

Thomas Frampton

University of Virginia School of Law

Date Written: September 5, 2023

Abstract

Supreme Court opinions involving race and the jury invariably open with the Fourteenth Amendment, the Civil Rights Act of 1875, or landmark cases like Strauder v. West Virginia (1880). Legal scholars and historians unanimously report that free people of color did not serve as jurors, in either the North or South, until 1860. In fact, this Article shows, Black men served as jurors in antebellum America decades earlier than anyone has previously realized. While instances of early Black jury service were rare, campaigns insisting upon Black citizens’ admission to the jury-box were not. From the late 1830s onward, Black activists across the country organized to abolish the all-white jury. They faced, and occasionally overcame, staunch resistance. This Article uses jury lists, court records, convention minutes, diaries, bills of sale, tax rolls, and other overlooked primary sources to recover these forgotten efforts, led by activists who understood the jury-box to be both a marker and maker of citizenship. A broader historical perspective—one that centers Black activists in the decades before the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868—offers a new way of thinking about the relationship between race, rights, citizenship, and the jury.

Keywords: race, juries, legal history, citizenship, abolition

Suggested Citation:

Frampton, Thomas, The First Black Jurors and the Integration of the American Jury (September 5, 2023). New York University Law Review, 2024, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4562373

The First Black Jurors and the Integration of the American Jury

New York University Law Review, 2024

Source:

Gwendolyn Brooks


 American poet and educator (born June 7, 1917, TopekaKansas, U.S.—died December 3, 2000, Chicago, Illinois) American poet whose works deal with the everyday life of urban Blacks. She was the first African American poet to win the Pulitzer Prize (1950), and in 1968 she was named the poet laureate of Illinois.

Brooks graduated from Wilson Junior College in Chicago in 1936. Her early verses appeared in the Chicago Defender, a newspaper written primarily for that city’s African American community. Her first published collection, A Street in Bronzeville (1945), reveals her talent for making the ordinary life of her neighbours extraordinary. Annie Allen (1949), for which she won the Pulitzer Prize, is a loosely connected series of poems related to an African American girl’s growing up in Chicago. The same theme was used for Brooks’s novel Maud Martha (1953).