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Martinet
Founders
A.P. Tureaud
Alexander Pierre (A.P.)
Tureaud was the most prominent civil rights attorney in
Louisiana from the 1940s until the 1960s and played a
leading role in the desegregation of the New Orleans
public schools. Tureaud was born in 1899 in New Orleans
into a black Creole family. In 1916, Tureaud moved to
Chicago as part of the Great Migration of southern
blacks to northern cities and eventually settled in
Washington, D.C., with a job as a clerk in the U.S.
Department of Justice in 1918. While in Washington,
Tureaud finished high school, attended St. John's
College, and in 1921 enrolled in Howard University Law
School. Upon graduating from Howard Law School in 1925,
Tureaud returned to New Orleans to practice law. When
Tureaud became a member of the bar of Louisiana in 1927,
there were only four other black lawyers in the entire
state. He worked in the office of the comptroller of
customs in New Orleans from 1927 until 1941.
Tureaud became active in the
New Orleans branch of the NAACP-the first branch
established in the Deep South-and in 1950 became the
branch president. In 1941, Tureaud, along with Thurgood
Marshall of the national office of the NAACP's Legal
Defense and Educational Fund,
successfully challenged the inequality in salaries paid
to black and white teachers in New Orleans. Over the
next twenty-five years Tureaud filed most of the
important civil rights litigation in Louisiana,
including suits challenging the exclusion of blacks from
the state's
colleges and universities, the exclusion of blacks from
New Orleans city buses and city parks, and the
inequality in funding for black and white schools in New
Orleans. Tureaud also filed litigation challenging
school segregation in New Orleans. In time, Tureaud was
called "Mr. Civil
Rights of Louisiana." Tureaud ran unsuccessfully for
Congress in 1958.
Tureaud filed litigation challenging school segregation
in New Orleans in 1952, litigation that would eventually
succeed in 1960 when four black children entered two
all-white schools. By this time, Tureaud's home was
under FBI surveillance. Tureaud continued his legal work
during
the 1960s, winning before the Supreme Court an important
victory protecting the rights of sit-in protesters.
Tureaud retired from law practice in 1971 and died in
1972.
Israel Meyer Augustine,
Jr.
Israel Augustine, Jr., the
first African American district judge in Louisiana, was
born in New Orleans on November 16, 1924. A graduate of
McDonogh 35 High School he received a B. A. from
Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He
obtained his law degree from Lincoln University in St.
Louis, Missouri. In 1951, he was admitted to the
Louisiana Bar and in 1962, he was allowed to practice
before the Supreme Court. In 1970, Israel M. Augustine,
Jr. became the first Black elected as judge in Criminal
District Court. In 1971, he presided over the Black
Panther Trial, a case that brought him national
attention. A champion of the people, Augustine
established several community programs such as "Roots"
Home Coming Program, the First Offender and Angola
Awareness. Judge Augustine died of Lou Gehrig's disease
and is buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery.

Ernest Nathan "Dutch"
Morial
Ernest Nathan Morial,
lawyer, judge, state legislator, and mayor, was born in
New Orleans on October 9, 1929, to a working class
family. In 1951, he graduated from Xavier University
with a B. S. degree and in 1954 he became the first
African American to receive a L. L. B. Degree in Law
from Louisiana State University Law School. In 1967,
Morial was elected to the Louisiana House of
Representatives, thus becoming the first African
American legislator since Reconstruction. In 1970,
Morial became the first African American Juvenile Court
judge. Two years later, he attained another "first" when
he was elected to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals.
He was elected mayor of the city of New Orleans in 1977,
the first African American to attain this title. Morial
was one of the nation's leading civil rights advocates.
With support from his mentor A. P. Tureaud and his wife
Sybil Haydel, he won a number of successful
desegregation suits aimed at education, transportation,
and public institutions. Ernest Morial died after an
asthmatic attack and is buried in St. Louis Cemetery
No.1. His eldest son, Marc Morial, became mayor of New
Orleans in 1994.
Justice Revius Ortique
Ortique was born in New Orleans and served four years
as an Army officer during World War II. He earned a
bachelor's degree from Dillard University, a master's
degree from Indiana University and a law degree from
Southern University in 1956. In 1978, the Louisiana
Supreme Court appointed Ortique to a seat on the Civil
District bench to complete the term of Adrian Duplantier,
who was appointed to a federal district judgeship. As a
civil rights attorney in the 1950s and '60s, Ortique,
who was the attorney for The Louisiana Weekly, led
efforts in the state to integrate labor unions and
represented Black workers in lawsuits seeking pay equal
to their white counterparts.
In 1958, Ortique was elected to the first of five terms
as president of the Urban League of Greater New Orleans.
A year later, he was elected president of the National
Bar Association, an association of African-American
lawyers and judges. He also served three terms as
president of the Community Relations Council, a biracial
group in New Orleans. "I think many people do not know
what his role was early in the civil rights movement,"
said Sybil Morial, widow of New Orleans' first black
mayor Ernest "Dutch" Morial, and mother of former Mayor
Marc Morial.
Revius Ortique Jr. was appointed by five U.S. presidents
to various commissions and boards, including a term
under President Clinton as an alternate U.S. delegate to
the United Nations. He served as for eight years as
chairman of the New Orleans Aviation Board after being
appointed by Mayor Marc H. Morial.

Norman C. Francis
Born March 20, 1931, Lafayette, Louisiana, is the
president of Xavier University of Louisiana. He has been
Xavier's president since 1968, making him (as of
December 2006) the longest-tenured current leader of an
American university. He is also the chairman of the
Louisiana Recovery Authority, the state agency in charge
of planning the recovery and rebuilding of Louisiana
after Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita. In 1952, the
21-year-old Francis was one of two Black students chosen
to integrate Loyola University Law School in New
Orleans, La., and in 1955 became the school's
first Black graduate. Francis served in the Army for two
years, then joined the U.S. Attorney's
Office to help integrate federal agencies. During the
turbulent times preceding the Civil Rights Movement he
returned to Xavier University to begin his climb up the
administrative ladder. In 1961, while serving as dean of
men, Francis played a key role in Xavier's decision to
house the Freedom Riders,
an integrated group testing application of the
Supreme Court decision banning discrimination in
interstate rail and bus travel,
in a campus dormitory after they were flown to
New Orleans by Federal Marshals after having been
attacked in three Alabama cities (Anniston, Birmingham
and Montgomery). About that same time, Francis acted as
counsel for the Xavier student body president,
Rudolph Lombard,
who had been arrested for attempting to integrate the
lunch counter at McCrory's
on Canal Street in New Orleans. It was those experiences
that led Francis to choose the path of education over
that of a law career. Ironically, he accepted the
presidency at Xavier on the very day that the Rev.
Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated in Memphis,
Tenn., in 1968. Francis has been chairman of the board
of Educational Testing Service, The Carnegie Foundation
for the Advancement of Teaching and the Southern
Education Foundation, and president of the American
Association of Higher Education and the United Negro
College Fund. He is a fellow of the American Academy of
Arts and Sciences. He has received 35 honorary degrees.
In December 2006, Francis was awarded the Presidential
Medal of Freedom.
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