BlackFacts Details

Adams, Jr., Oscar (1925–1997)

Oscar William Adams Jr. was the first African American Supreme Court Justice appointed in Alabama and when he later stood for election to a full term, the first African American elected to a statewide constitutional office. He also litigated many civil rights cases in his career as a lawyer and was part of the first African American law firm established in the state.

Adams was born on February 7, 1925, in Birmingham, Alabama, to Oscar William Adams and Ella Virginia (Eaton) Adams; he was the older brother to Frank E. Adams. Oscar attended public schools in Birmingham, including A.H. Parker High School, and graduated from Talladega College in 1944 with a degree in philosophy.

Because racial segregation prohibited African Americans from attending law school in Alabama, Adams attended Howard University School of Law in Washington, D.C., and graduated in 1947. Adams then gained admitted to the Alabama State Bar and began his legal career that would span five decades. Adams married Willa Ingersoll Adams in 1949 and they had three children. Willa died in 1982 from breast cancer, and Adams later married Anne-Marie Bradford.

Adams litigated many civil rights and labor cases, and his clients included Martin Luther King Jr., the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Fred Shuttleworth’s Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The firm handled school desegregation and discrimination cases, as well as voting rights cases. Notable cases included Armstrong v. Birmingham Board of Education (1964), Terry v. Elmwood Cemetery (1969), and Pettway v. ACIPCO (1974).

On July 8, 1966, Adams became the first African American member of Birmingham Bar Association, a local professional organization of attorneys. He ran his own law office until 1967 when he went into practice with white attorney Harvey Burg, creating the state’s first integrated law practice. In 1969 Adams and James Baker, an Ivy League lawyer who had distinguished himself as a civil

Michael Steele and Dave Rubin Talk Republicans, Trump, and Free Speech