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| J.R. Clifford | |||||
J. R. Clifford, West Virginia’s first black lawyer, who lived from Born in Grant County, J. R. Clifford fought in the Civil War at the age of 15. After the war, he moved to Martinsburg where he founded the Pioneer Press, West Virginia's first black newspaper. In 1892, he took on the case of Mrs. Carrie Williams. Mrs. Williams was the schoolteacher at the Coketon Colored School in Coketon, WV. At that time, Mrs. Williams was told to teach the "colored" children for only five months of the year unlike the "white" children that were to be taught for eight months of the year. In a very bold move, Mrs. Williams taught for the entire 8 months and then demanded her full 8 months salary on the basis that education was to be equal.
Later, J.R. Clifford along with friend William E. B. Dubois and several other African-American men banded together and formed what is now known as the Clifford Niagara Movement. For more information on J.R. Clifford, Carrie Williams and the Clifford-Niagara Movement please visit www.jrclifford.org.
Additionally Tom Rodd, Senior Clerk for the West Virginia Supreme Court has written a re-enactment of the events surrounding the Williams case. Click here for the transcript of the play based on these historical events. On September 5, 2007 Governor Joe Manchin, III of West Virginia and Secretary of State Betty Ireland signed a proclamation making September 13, 2007 J.R. Clifford Day. Click here to see the proclamation.
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FRIENDS OF BLACKWATER |
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