Courage and Consequence – The Bench Under Siege
One Black lawyer. A bar that twice refused him. A seat on the highest court of a former slave state. And a campaign of terror outside the courthouse, riding to take that state back at gunpoint. That was the ground Jonathan Jasper Wright stood on when he became the first Black justice on any state supreme court in America. He kept the robe on while Reconstruction collapsed around him. When the case came that could have bought him peace — bless the new governor, and go along — he dissented, and they drove him from the bench on a charge they could not prove. The men who took the state are a footnote now. The justice they erased waited a century for his portrait to go back on the wall. He held the law when holding it was the most dangerous thing a Black man in South Carolina could do. Jonathan Jasper Wright needs to be remembered.
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