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Hugo Black

Hugo LaFayette Black (February 27, 1886 - September 25, 1971) was a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (1937 - 1971).

Black was born in Harlan, Alabama[?], a rural town in Clay County. After a brief stint in medical school, Black earned his law degree from the University of Alabama[?] in 1906. While practicing law, he was noted for his success in workers compensation cases.

After serving stateside as an Army captain in World War I, and as Police Court judge in Birmingham and Solicitor for Jefferson County, Black ran for a seat in the United States Senate. Since in 1920s Alabama the Ku Klux Klan was such a politically active force, Black, as insurance for his upcoming senate race, joined the organization and was an active member for two years, but avoiding involvement in the violence sponsored by the group.

Black won a seat in the Senate in 1926 and remained for eleven years. While there, he was a staunch supporter of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, and was to remain so while acting as a justice on the Supreme Court.

Appointed to the Supreme Court by Roosevelt, he was confirmed by the Senate to replace Justice Willis Van Devanter[?] and was sworn in on August 19, 1937. His opinion of the majority, ruling in favor of four African-Americans who had been coerced by police into murder confessions, in Chambers v. Florida (309 US 227 1940), made clear that his previous connections with the Klan were not to have an effect on his performance in the Court.

During the anti-Communist McCarthy era of the 1950s, Black became known as a defender of First Amendment rights, perhaps most notably in his lone dissent in Dennis v. United States (341 US 494 1951), and would continue in this throughout the rest of his career on the Court.

Black resigned from the Court on September 17, 1971, and died eight days later. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.



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