Butler R. Wilson (1861 - 1939)

Mon Jul 22, 1861

Image


Butler R. Wilson, born on this day in 1861, was an attorney and civil rights activist based in Boston, Massachusetts who organized with the NAACP and became the first black person admitted to the American Bar Association.

Wilson was born in Greensboro, Georgia free people of color who were prominent members of their community. Wilson attended Atlanta University, a historically black college, and moved to Boston for law school after graduating.

After being admitted to the Massachusetts State Bar in 1884, Wilson built a successful practice serving clients of all races, and became a respected attorney in New England.

In 1911, the American Bar Association (ABA) unknowingly admitted three black men, one of whom was Wilson, to the organization, as applicants did not have to state their race. Once their race became known, the ABA rescinded all three memberships, prompting national outrage and resignations in protest. Despite this, the ABA did not re-instate the men and continued their discriminatory practices for several decades afterward.

Wilson, who was still a member of the Massachusetts State Bar, would go on to fight racial discrimination in legal arenas for the next several decades. He was also a founding member and president of the Boston branch of the NAACP and participated in W.E.B. Du Bois’s Niagara Movement.