Gone But Not Forgotten: Happy Birthday To The First Black Female US Delegate To The United Nations, Edith Spurlock

2 Posted by - October 13, 2015 - BLACK EDUCATION, Black First, BLACK POLITICS, BLACK WOMEN, Holidays And Birthdays

Edith Spurlock was born in Pittsburgh on October 13, 1901. She grew up in a working class family, one of seven children, and attended Pittsburgh’s Peabody High School.  Upon graduation, she married Rufus Sampson, a field agent for Tuskegee Institute.

After working briefly for Associated Charities in Pittsburgh Sampson decided to enroll in the New York University School of Social Work.  One of her instructors, George W. Kirchwey, a Columbia University Law School professor, suggested she pursue a career in law after he noticed her doing exceptionally well in his criminology class.  Sampson and her husband moved to Chicago to care for two children left by her deceased sister.  She attended evening classes at the John Marshall Law School and earned a law degree.  She then enrolled in Chicago’s Loyola University Law School.  In 1927 she became the first woman to receive a Master of Law degree from Loyola University.

Sampson went to work for Cook County in 1927.  She worked as a probation officer and then assistant referee in juvenile court, a post she held for eighteen years.  In 1934, Sampson established her own practice and became one of the first women to argue before the U.S. Supreme Court.  By 1947 she was appointed assistant state’s attorney (prosecutor) for Cook County.

Sampson was also affiliated with the Chicago Professional Women’s Club, the Afro-World Fellowship, and the Women’s Progressive Committee, serving for a time as president of each organization. She worked with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the League of Women Voters, the National Council of Negro Women, and the Chicago Urban League.

In 1950, Edith Spurlock Sampson became the first named to the permanent United States delegation to the United Nations.  While working at the UN, Sampson went on several international lecture tours and held membership on the U.S. delegation to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).

In 1962, at the age of 61, Sampson was elected a judge on the Chicago Municipal Court.  With that election she became the first woman in the United States elevated to the bench by popular vote.  Edith Spurlock Sampson retired from the bench in 1978 and died one year later in Chicago.

Sources:
Edith Anne Lewis and Lorraine M. Gutierrez, Empowering Women of Color (New York, Columbia University Press, 1999); Jessie Carney Smith, Black Firsts: 4,000 Ground-Breaking and Pioneering Historical Events (Canton, Michigan: Visible Ink Press, 2003); http://www.stanford.edu/group/WLHP/papers/edith.html; http://www.nathanielturner.com/edithsampson.htm

Contributor:

University of Washington

article found  at: http://www.blackpast.org/aah/sampson-edith-spurlock-1901-1979#.Zw71PONW.dpuf

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