Carsie Hall
Carsie Alvin Hall Sr. (1908-1989) was a lawyer who handled civil rights cases in Mississippi.[1] He represented the Mississippi NAACP and served as president of the Jackson, Mississippi branch of the NAACP.[2] He defended civil rights activists arrested during the Freedom Summer.[3]
In 1927 he graduated from Jackson College High School and in 1935 he graduated from Jackson College. He worked as a mail carrier to pay his way through law school.[4] He and Sidney R. Redmond studied law together.[5]
In 1962 he wrote a letter announcing the formation of the Voters' League and was its president.[6] In 1964 he was refused access to inmates at a Mississippi jail.[7]
Richard Haley wrote him about the Otha Williams and Lula Bell Wright cases.[8]
He played dominos.[4]
He and Jack Young are honored at the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum. A historical marker commemorates him along with fellow Jackson civil rights attorneys R. J. Brown and Jack Young.[9]
See also
- Council of Federated Organizations
- Flonzie Brown Wright
- R. Jess Brown
References
- ^ Grove, Garret (March 1, 2025). "Black jurists break barriers in Mississippi legal history". WJTV.
- ^ "Hall, Carsie A. - Civil Rights Digital Library". crdl.usg.edu.
- ^ Jr, Clarence Mitchell (August 16, 2022). The Papers of Clarence Mitchell Jr., Volume VI: The Struggle to Pass the 1960 Civil Rights Act, 1959–1960. Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0-8214-4746-8 – via Google Books.
- ^ a b Obituary
- ^ Hustwit, William P. (February 5, 2019). Integration Now: Alexander v. Holmes and the End of Jim Crow Education. UNC Press Books. ISBN 978-1-4696-4856-9 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Correspondence, page 1: Letter from Carsie A. Hall announcing formation of The Voters' League, January 19, 1962., | DPLA". Black Women's Suffrage | DPLA.
- ^ "52 DENIED COUNSEL IN MISSISSIPPI JAIL (Published 1964)". The New York Times. June 1964.
- ^ https://www.crmvet.org/lets/640615_core_letter4.pdf
- ^ "Mississippi Freedom Trail Names Eight New Markers". Visit Jackson.