A History of African-American Lawyers in Nashville

by Lewis L. Laska

African-American lawyers have practiced in Nashville at least since 1868, when Alfred Menefee, a grocer, received a license to practice before justices of the peace. Menefee thus became the first black office holder in Nashville, also being named magistrate by 1897. Nineteenth century licensing, rather informal, involved two types of licenses for attorneys. The lesser license allowed one to practice before the magistrates and could be obtained simply by gaining approval from a panel of justices and paying a fee. The “regular” license allowed a lawyer to practice in circuit and chancery courts. The approval process required an oral bar exam conducted in open court, where a panel of practicing attorneys peppered the applicant with questions. Judges freely signed licenses, even for black lawyers, but records were not carefully preserved, so the name of Nashville’s first African-American attorney is unknown.

·Gavel and court minutes at the Minnesota Judicial Center (photo by Jonathunder, 2008)

Black lawyers generally needed a white mentor in order to succeed. One of the earliest African Americans to practice in Nashville was Prince Albert Ewing, who studied law under the influential lawyer/politician Edward Baxter. Born into slavery, Ewing had eventually become a Fisk graduate. Many local historians believe that when he obtained a “regular” attorney’s license on September 15, 1871, he was likely the first African American to do so.

His twin brother, Taylor E. Ewing Sr., was the attorney for the National Baptist Publishing Board, and was almost certainly the first black lawyer to represent a corporate client.

William H. Young began practicing law in 1880. He wrested the Republican Party from white control in 1888 and actually carried Davidson County in a race for Congress.

The first African American law school in the South was established in 1879 at Central Tennessee College, later known as Walden University. In 1897 the school graduated the first black female attorney, Lutie A. Lytle, who was also its first black female law professor. The school continued to graduate two or three students each year until it closed in 1903.

Samuel A. McElwee, from composite photograph of the 45th Tennessee General Assembly, House of Representatives, 1887-1888.

The most famous Central Tennessee alumnus was Samuel A. McElwee (1859-1914), one of the earliest black members of the Tennessee House of Representatives. He served three terms (1883-1888) and was nominated for Speaker of the House in his second term. Although he did not win the position, he did receive all the Republican votes in a Democrat-controlled General Assembly. A powerful voice for fair treatment of blacks, he delivered a nominating speech for the vice-presidential candidate (William R. Moore) at the 1888 Republican National Convention. Surprisingly, McElwee told a biographer in 1902 that his color had not been an obstacle to his law practice, and that he had received due recognition from judges and the legal fraternity in general. Another Central Tennessee alumnus, George L. Vaughn, would later convince the Supreme Court (in Shelley v. Kraemer, 1948) to declare that courts could not enforce real estate covenants that restricted the purchase or sale of property based on race.

Although Tennessee passed the first anti-Ku Klux Klan law in 1865 – a law which is still on the books – it was also one of the first states to enact a Jim Crow (segregation) law. Chapter 130 of the Acts of Tennessee (1875) permitted discrimination in public places, from hotels and theaters to trains and streetcars. Among many other constraints on African American liberties, Jim Crow law and custom militated against black professionals, including lawyers. It was soon literally impossible for blacks to study law in the state because no black law schools existed in Tennessee after 1903, and a 1901 statute forbade teaching both races in the same school, public or private. By 1910 only one or two African Americans received law licenses each year in Tennessee.

·         James C. Napier, Colored American Newspaper, Washington, D.C., 2 Nov 1901, p. 1

Probably the two best-known black lawyers during that era were James C. Napier and Robert L. Mayfield, who represented widely different roles African American lawyers were likely to play in the profession. Napier (1845-1940) was a protégé of accommodationist Booker T. Washington, who promoted advancement of the race by working quietly within the system. Napier was rewarded with one of the nation’s top patronage positions available to blacks: registrar of the United States Treasury (1911-1913) under President William H. Taft.  J. C. Napier was not exclusively an attorney. His business ventures included banking and street railways, and at one time he was a trustee of three black colleges. On the other hand, the legal career of Robert Mayfield (1874-1921) consisted almost entirely of litigations against Jim Crow laws and practices. Unfortunately, his work was flawed by technical errors, and he was blamed for mishandling an important 1905 suit against the L&N Railroad Company regarding racial discrimination. Quite unlike the highly principled Napier, Mayfield led a rather dissolute life and was ultimately disbarred in 1919.

·         Jubilee Hall, Fisk University, Historic American Buildings Survey. Retrieved from the Library of Congress <www.loc.gov/item/tn0017/>    

By the 1920s both races had come to regard African American lawyers as marginal to the legal system. Black attorneys tended to be entrepreneurs who sold insurance and real estate, and who promoted such shady public entertainments as boxing matches. Of the nine black lawyers living in Nashville in 1920, only four were practicing their profession full-time.

There were, however, exceptions. The prototypical “new” lawyer – college educated and law-school trained – was Walter W. Walker (1895-1948), who opened his Nashville practice in 1928 and soon became president of the local NAACP chapter. Among other efforts, he filed a lawsuit to equalize teacher pay, thus becoming the first actual civil rights attorney in Nashville.


Previously published in David C. Rutherford, Bench and Bar II, Nashville Bar Foundation, 1981. Used by permission of the author.

Samuel A. McElwee, 1859-1914

by Kathy B. Lauder.

Samuel Allen McElwee was born a slave in Haywood County, Tennessee, on June 26, 1859.  After emancipation he attended Freedmen’s Bureau schools1 and by 16 was teaching in a local school himself.2

Rep. Samuel A. McElwee, Esq.

In 1875 he entered Oberlin College for a year, taking odd jobs to pay his tuition.3 Returning to Tennessee, he walked ten miles each day after work to study Latin, German, and algebra with a white Vanderbilt student.4 He entered Fisk University in 1878, earning a Peabody Scholarship5 to pay his way.

While still enrolled at Fisk, McElwee won a seat in the 43rd Tennessee General Assembly (1882), representing Haywood County.6 He graduated the following May, just as his first House term ended.7 In 1884, at age 25, he became secretary of the Tennessee Convention, a state-wide gathering of black leaders,8 and served as a state delegate to the Republican National Convention.9

McElwee entered Nashville’s Central Tennessee College during his second legislative term, earning a law degree in 1885.10 He became the focus of a historic vote after former U.S. Senator Roderick Butler nominated him for House Speaker. Although unable to surmount a large Democratic majority, the 26-year-old former slave received 32 of the 93 votes cast.11

The first black Tennessean elected to a third legislative term (1887), McElwee pleaded for stronger legal powers over lynch mobs: “Great God, when will this Nation treat the Negro as an American citizen?”12 Despite his highly publicized speech, the House tabled the bill 41-36.13 Later that year McElwee spoke at Tuskegee Institute’s graduation14 and presided over the Colored World’s Fair Association.15 

In 1888 Samuel McElwee married the “handsome and cultured” Georgia Shelton.16 Their wedding party included many prominent Nashvillians, black and white. Fisk President E. M. Cravath officiated; guests included Charles Nelson, Granville P. Lipscomb, Dr. H. T. Noel, Dr. R. F. Boyd, Major E. B. Stahlman, and former Confederate General George Maney.17  

The State Republican Party elected McElwee delegate-at-large to the 1888 Republican National Convention,18 where he was a member of the committee on credentials.19 McElwee’s eloquent words about the potential role of African Americans in national politics helped persuade Benjamin Harrison to nominate former slave Frederick Douglass as ambassador to Haiti and to endorse bills prohibiting Southern states from obstructing African American suffrage.20

At home McElwee faced powerful political challenges to his campaign for an unprecedented fourth legislative term: Haywood County officials employed “disgraceful election methods”21 to ensure his defeat,22 and white separatists drove him from the county.  During the following term (1889) the all-white General Assembly approved legislation that would disfranchise black voters for decades.23

McElwee and his wife spent the next twelve years in Nashville, where he established a thriving law office.24 Both Samuel and Georgia were active in civic organizations, and their names regularly appeared in the social pages of the newspapers. In 1901 McElwee moved his wife and daughters to Chicago,25 where his legal practice flourished for over a decade. He won many important cases, including a multi-million-dollar lawsuit against the City Railway Company.26 He died in Chicago October 21, 1914, at the age of 56. 27 (2014)


SOURCES:

1 “Brave Tennessean Forgotten by History,” Nashville Tennessean, February 13, 1971.

2 “A Remarkable Negro,” Nashville Daily American, June 9, 1888.

3 “Brave Tennessean Forgotten by History.”

4 “The Death of Atty. Samuel A. McElwee,” Chicago Broad Axe, October 24, 1914.

5 Tennessee State Board of Education Minute Book, Volume 55, page 131.

6 McBride, Robert M., and Dan M. Robinson. Biographical Directory, Tennessee General Assembly, Volume II (1861-1901). Nashville: Tennessee State Library and Archives, and Tennessee Historical Commission, 1979.

7 Simmons, William J.  Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. Cleveland: G. M. Rewell & Co., 1887, 500.

8 “The Tennessee Convention: Colored Men in Council at Nashville—Vital Questions Ably Discussed—Resolutions setting forth the Grievances and Needs of the Race,” New York Globe, March 15, 1884.    

9 Johnson, Charles W. Republican Party (U.S.:1854-), 227. Official Proceedings of the Republican National Convention, Chicago, June 3, 4, 5 and 6, 1884, 21.

10 Simmons, William J.  Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. Cleveland: G. M. Rewell & Co., 1887, 500.

11 Tennessee General Assembly. Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of Tennessee. Nashville: Tavel & Howe, 1885.

12 Nashville Union, February 23, 1887.

13 Tennessee General Assembly. Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of Tennessee. Nashville: Tavel & Howe, 1886.

14 “Tuskegee Normal School: Celebrating Its Sixth Anniversary—An Exhibit of  Industries—Commencement Exercises,” New York Freeman, June 4, 1887.

15 “General Announcement. Colored World’s Exposition, 1887-’88,” Weekly Pelican, January 29, 1887.

16 “McElwee. A Southern Lawyer, the Brilliant Orator and Barrister,” Freeman, March 2, 1889.

17 “Hon. S. A. McElwee Married,” Nashville Daily American, June 7, 1888.

18 “A Remarkable Negro.”

19 Johnson, Charles W. Republican Party (U.S.:1854-), 227. Official Proceedings of the Republican National Convention, Chicago, June 3, 4, 5 and 6, 1884, 24.

20 Calhoun, Charles W. Benjamin Harrison: The American Presidents Series: The 23rd President, 1889-1893. New York: Times Books, 2013,

21 “McElwee. A Southern Lawyer, the Brilliant Orator and Barrister.”

22 Granberry, Dorothy. “When the Rabbit Foot Was Worked and Republican Votes Became Democratic Votes: Black Disfranchisement in Haywood County, Tennessee.”  Tennessee Historical Quarterly, Vol. LXIII, No. 1, Spring 2004.

23 Lester, Connie L. “Disfranchising Laws.” Tennessee Encyclopedia, Online edition. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2002-2014.

24 “An Eloquent Lawyer’s Great Effort Highly Complimented by Leading Whites,” Freeman, June 20, 1891.  Also “Professional Success,” Freeman, July 11, 1891.

25 “Chips,” Broad Axe, August 12, 1901.

26 “Chips,” Broad Axe, February 8, 1902

27 “Death Claims Samuel A. McElwee: Well Known Attorney Was Native of Brownsville, Tenn.—Was Member of Tennessee Legislature.” The Chicago Defender, October 24, 1914.

SUGGESTED READING:

Cartwright, Joseph H.  The Triumph of Jim Crow: Tennessee Race Relations in the 1880s.  Knoxville: UT Press, 1976.

Couto, Richard A. Lifting the Veil: A Political History of the Struggles for Emancipation. Knoxville: UT Press, 1993.

Granberry, Dorothy. “When the Rabbit Foot Was Worked and Republican Votes Became Democratic Votes: Black Disfranchisement in Haywood County, Tennessee.”  Tennessee Historical Quarterly, Vol. LXIII, No. 1, Spring 2004.

“This Honorable Body: African American Legislators in 19th Century Tennessee.” Exhibits, Tennessee State Library and Archives.  https://sharetngov.tnsosfiles.com/tsla/exhibits/blackhistory/index.htm