RUSSELL LUTHER CARTER
'36
Civil RIghts Lawyer, Judge
Russell Luther Carter was a soldier, attorney, judge, public servant,
poet, and champion for the civil rights of all people. He was born
April 10, 1919, one of eleven children of William F. and Mary Royal
Carter. Carter graduated from West High in 1936 where he was a member
of the baseball team and the German Club. He received a bachelor's
in business from The Ohio State University in 1940 and his law degree
from Harvard University Law School in 1947, the same year he became
the first black assistant prosecuting attorney in Montgomery County.
Carter enlisted as a private in 1941, served in the European Theater
of Operation during World War II and received his discharge as a lieutenant,
Coast Artillery Corp. in 1945.
In 1947, he became the first black assistant prosecuting attorney
in Montgomery County; in 1959, the first black superintendent of the
budget for the State of Ohio; and in 1962, the first black candidate
for statewide elected office in Ohio when he ran for a newly-created
seat as Congressman-at-large.
In 1953, Carter was appointed to the bench of Dayton Municipal Court
by Gov. Frank J. Lausche. He served on the Dayton Civil Service Board
from 1966-1974. Some of his most historic legal work came from 1948-1963
when he was legal counsel for the Ohio Conference of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
In this capacity, he represented the plaintiffs in the first successful
school desegregation case in this country, along with his friends
Thurgood Marshall, who became a U.S. Supreme Court Justice, and Constance
Baker Motley, who became the first African-American woman to serve
as a federal judge.
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The case in Hillsboro, Ohio came two years before Brown v. the Board
of Education. Carter's obituary program says: "He lived his life so
that future generations would no longer have to be distinguished as
the first ‘black' this or that, but as the ‘best' at whatever they sought
to achieve."
For 49 years, Judge Carter was an active member of Bethel Baptist Church
and an emeritus trustee and legal counsel. He took great pride in the
fraternal organizations which shaped his character and forged lifelong
friendships, Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Inc., Prince Hall Masons and
Shriners; and Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity.
He served as an active member of the American Legion, Baptist Layman's
League of Ohio, Benevolent Order of Elks, Boy Scouts of America, Church
Federation of Greater Dayton, Community Welfare Council, Dayton Bar
Association, Dayton Chamber of Commerce, Dayton Urban League, Family
and Children's Association, The Harvard Club, Mary Scott Home for the
Aged, The Ohio State Club, Prisoners Aid Society, the Thurgood Marshall
Law Society, and the YMCA Board.
Judge Carter's wife of 54 years, Esther Scott Carter, died in 1999.
He is survived by their daughter, Esther Carter; a sister, Mary Carter
Glascor ‘34; and a host of other relatives.
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