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Thurgood Marshall — Part 12
Page 117
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148
THURGOOD MARSHALL continues
Eee . ee
WITH WIFE “BUSTER.” Mar-hall lived in Harlem until her death last win-
ter. They married white in enllege, just before Mar-hal! entered law school.
OC
by fighting segregation in the courts. The difficulty had been, as
the late Justice Louis Brandeis had confided in 1926 to Howard’s
president, that case after case involving Negro civil rights had been
lost before an otherwise sympathetic Supreme Court because of
shabby preparation and poor arguing.
To correct this Houston rebuilt Howard by hiring an able faculty
(most, like him, Negro graduates of the best white schools) and
making the studies brutally difficult. He picked the brightest boys in
school to help him in his pioneering N.A.A.C.P. work, and gave
them special training for the struggle ahead. Thurgood Marshall
was one of the carefully chosen disciples who came to Houston for
guidance and inspiration. These Houston gave without stint. But
when Marshall came once complaining about the dificult work
and looking for sympathy, Houston rebuffed him coldly, saying,
“No tea for the feeble, no crape for the dead.”
Marshall! did not seem then like much of a man for a cause, any
more than he does today. He had only had the desire to be a lawver
for a year or two, and the ambition came partly from the fact that
he had recently gotten married. His wife was Vivien (“Buster”)
Burey, who had left the University of Pennsylvania to marry Thur-
good, then a student at Lincoln University near Oxford, Pa. He
had been christened Thoroughgood Marshall after his grandfather,
a man named Marshall who had worked for the Thoroughgeod
family in Maryland and had taken his master’s name for himself
when he enlisted in the Civil War. Grandson Thurgood (his mother
had never called him anything else and that is now his legal name)
grew up and went to segregated schools on Baltimore’s northwest
side, a polite middle-class Negro residential area.
Born with a disputatious streak
UT there was a disputatious streak in Thurgood’s family. At
home on Druid Hill Avenue, the Marshalls were locally noted
for their violent nightly arguments. “The lady next door.” say
Thurgood, “could always tell when my brether Aubrey and WY
got home from college,” and passers-by outside often had to
he reassured that there wasn’t any brawl taking place—just the
Marshalls arguing.
During his law schoo} years Marshall got up every day at 5 a.m,
and commuted from Baltimore to Washington, spending his morn-
ings in class, his afternoons and evenings studving or working inv
the law library to help pay his tuition. It was usually midnight
when he gat to bed. He became an exceptional student. William
Hastie. a 1930 graduate of Harvard Law who taught him contracts, =
was so impressed by a brief Marshall wrote for his class that he
has kept it ever since. “Now and then,” adds Hastie. who is now
a federal circuit court judge in Philadelphia, “I take it out and
look at it again, and I stil] admire it.”
Marshall graduated at the head of his class and joined a small
law firm in Baltimore in the fall of 1933. Seen he found himself
embroiled in civil rights cases.
mally in the courts. They paid him nothing and even seared away
other business. “Word got around that I was a ‘free’ lawyer-—
that does you no good;” he says. Thurgood sometimes had to
berrow from his secretary to pay for lunch.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 144
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Far fram becoming a hero to his friends, Thurgood was consid;
ered a fool for taking on civil rights cases, which usually failed dish
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