查尔斯·汉密尔顿·休斯顿

Genna Rae McNell
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The next two years he taught English at Howard Univer- sity's Commercial College. At the age of twenty-one Charles Houston entered the first Black officers' training camp, Fort Des Moines, where he earned his commission as a First Lieutenant in the Infantry. The Army's unfair assignment of a number of Black infan- try officers and disparaging reports regarding the ability of Blacks to train in the Special Services, however, offended and provoked Houston so much that he relinquished his rank and retrained to become a field artillery officer in the American Expeditionary Forces. As a Second Lieutenant overseas, he encountered virulent racism practiced by Red Cross workers, white enlisted men and his fellow white officers. Because of his race and color, he suffered arbitrary insults, indignities and exposure to mortal danger. Injustice at home and abroad prompted a decision to join his father in the practice of law. In the summer of 1919 following his dis- charge from the Army, racial violence erupted in Washington, D.C., and a score of other localities. Blacks were murdered and victimized. In the autumn following that Red Summer, Charles Houston entered Harvard Law School. He distinguished him- self at Harvard, being the first Black to serve on the Harvard Law Review, earning his LL.B. ('22) with an honors average and re- ceiving the Langdell Scholarship for further studies. Houston earned all A s in his fourth year of law studies during which time he was instructed by such men as Roscoe Pound and Felix Frankfurter.' In 1923 he ob- tained his Doctorate in Juridical Science and was awarded the prestigious Sheldon Travel- ing Fellowship which allowed him to study civil law at the University of Madrid and sit as an observer in the courts of Spain, Italy, Greece, Tunisia and Algeria. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

查尔斯·汉密尔顿·休斯顿,自由黑人和奴隶的后裔,1895年9月3日出生在华盛顿特区,他在那里生活和工作,直到1950年4月54岁去世。他的父母是律师威廉·勒普雷·休斯顿和前教师兼美发师玛丽·埃塞尔·汉密尔顿·休斯顿。在力所能及的范围内,这对有工作的父母为他们非常能干的独生子女提供了优越的环境。休斯顿就读于M街高中(后来以黑人诗人保罗·劳伦斯·邓巴的名字更名),这是一所面向华盛顿特区及周边地区黑人的大学预科学校。19岁时,他以优异的成绩从阿默斯特学院(Amherst College)毕业,并获得英语和Phi Beta Kappa荣誉学位。接下来的两年,他在霍华德大学商学院教英语。21岁时,查尔斯·休斯顿进入了第一个黑人军官训练营——得梅因堡,在那里他被任命为步兵中尉。然而,陆军不公平地分配了一些黑人步兵军官,以及贬低黑人在特种部队训练能力的报道,激怒了休斯顿,使他放弃了军衔,重新接受训练,成为美国远征军的野战炮兵军官。作为一名海外少尉,他遇到了红十字会工作人员、白人士兵和他的白人军官同僚所实施的恶毒的种族主义。由于他的种族和肤色,他遭受了任意的侮辱和侮辱,并面临致命的危险。国内外的不公正促使他决定加入父亲的律师行业。1919年夏天,在他从军队退伍后,种族暴力在华盛顿特区和其他几十个地方爆发。黑人被谋杀和受害。在那个红色的夏天之后的秋天,查尔斯·休斯顿进入了哈佛法学院。他在哈佛大学表现出色,成为第一位供职于《哈佛法律评论》的黑人,以优异的成绩获得法学学士学位(1922年),并获得朗德尔奖学金继续深造。休士顿在法律学习的第四年全部成绩都是A,师从罗斯科·庞德和菲利克斯·法兰克福等人。1923年,他获得了法学博士学位,并获得了著名的谢尔登旅行奖学金,这使他得以在马德里大学学习民法,并在西班牙、意大利、希腊、突尼斯和阿尔及利亚的法院担任观察员。休斯顿从南欧和北非回来后,加入了哥伦比亚特区的律师事务所,他的父亲自豪地将事务所更名为Houston & Houston。*文学士学位卡拉马祖学院;芝加哥大学文学硕士;芝加哥大学历史学博士候选人。麦克尼尔女士的论文题目是:查尔斯·汉密尔顿·休斯顿(1895-1950)和民权斗争。她曾在罗斯福大学担任美国黑人历史讲师,最近被任命为北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校历史系教员。1933年7月8日,沃尔特·怀特给罗杰·n·鲍德温的信,《美国公共服务基金:申请优先处理》,十年后,法兰克福评论说,休斯顿是他记忆中哈佛大学最聪明、最有能力的学生之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Charles Hamilton Houston
THE BLA CK LA W JO URNA L PAGE 123 CHARLES HAMILTON HOUSTON By GENNA RAE McNEIL* C HARLES HAMILTON HOUSTON, the descendant of a line of free Blacks and slaves, was born September 3, 1895, in Washington, D.C., where he lived and worked until his death at the age of fifty-four in April, 1950. His parents were William LePre Houston, a lawyer, and Mary Ethel Hamilton Houston, a former teacher and hairdresser. To the extent that it was within their power, these two working parents provided a privileg- ed environment for their very capable only child. Houston attended M Street High School (subsequently renamed for the Black poet, Paul Laurence Dunbar), the college preparatory school for Blacks in Washington, D.C., and the surrounding area. At the age of nineteen, he graduated Magna Cum Laude with an honors degree in English and Phi Beta Kappa from Amherst College. The next two years he taught English at Howard Univer- sity's Commercial College. At the age of twenty-one Charles Houston entered the first Black officers' training camp, Fort Des Moines, where he earned his commission as a First Lieutenant in the Infantry. The Army's unfair assignment of a number of Black infan- try officers and disparaging reports regarding the ability of Blacks to train in the Special Services, however, offended and provoked Houston so much that he relinquished his rank and retrained to become a field artillery officer in the American Expeditionary Forces. As a Second Lieutenant overseas, he encountered virulent racism practiced by Red Cross workers, white enlisted men and his fellow white officers. Because of his race and color, he suffered arbitrary insults, indignities and exposure to mortal danger. Injustice at home and abroad prompted a decision to join his father in the practice of law. In the summer of 1919 following his dis- charge from the Army, racial violence erupted in Washington, D.C., and a score of other localities. Blacks were murdered and victimized. In the autumn following that Red Summer, Charles Houston entered Harvard Law School. He distinguished him- self at Harvard, being the first Black to serve on the Harvard Law Review, earning his LL.B. ('22) with an honors average and re- ceiving the Langdell Scholarship for further studies. Houston earned all A s in his fourth year of law studies during which time he was instructed by such men as Roscoe Pound and Felix Frankfurter.' In 1923 he ob- tained his Doctorate in Juridical Science and was awarded the prestigious Sheldon Travel- ing Fellowship which allowed him to study civil law at the University of Madrid and sit as an observer in the courts of Spain, Italy, Greece, Tunisia and Algeria. After Houston returned from southern Europe and northern Africa and joined the District of Columbia bar, his father proudly renamed the office, Houston & Houston . *B.A. Kalamazoo College; M. A. University of Chicago; Candi- date for PhD History, University of Chicago. Ms. McNeil's dissertation topic is: Charles Hamilton Houston (1895-1950) and the Struggle for Civil Rights. She is a former instructor of Afro-American History at Roosevelt University, and is newly appointed to the faculty of the History Department, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. 1. Letter from Walter White to Roger N. Baldwin, July 8, 1933, in 8 American Fund for Public Service: Applications Favorably Acted Upon 135, Frankfurter commented ten years later that Houston was one of the most brilliant and able students at Harvard within his memory.
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