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Albion Winegar Tourgée (May 2, 1838 – May 21, 1905) was an
American soldier, lawyer, writer, politician, and diplomat.
Wounded in the
Civil War, he relocated...
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Supreme Court on
April 13, 1896.
Tourgée and
Phillips appeared in the
courtroom to
speak on
behalf of Plessy.
Tourgée built his case upon
violation of...
- president. The
group contacted attorney and
civil rights advocate Albion W.
Tourgée, who
agreed to help them
bring a test case to
court in
order to
force the...
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Without a
speedy reformation I will have to
resign my post."
Albion W.
Tourgée,
formerly of Ohio and a
friend of
President James A. Garfield,
moved to...
- narrative.
Wells asked lawyer and
activist Albion W.
Tourgee to
represent her on the case, but
Tourgee refused,
having largely retired from law (with the...
- fail. It may also
refer to: A Fool's Errand, an 1879
novel by
Albion W.
Tourgée A Fool's Errand, a 1921 book by
Jessie Louisa Rickard Fool's
Errand (novel)...
- 4551. SSRN 1121505. Elliott, Mark (2006). Color-Blind Justice:
Albion Tourgée and the
Quest for
Racial Equality from the
Civil War to
Plessy v. Ferguson...
-
establishment of
sociology as a
valid field of
academic study Albion W.
Tourgée (1838–1905),
American pioneer civil rights activist, soldier, lawyer, writer...
-
under Albion Winegar Tourgée who was at that time a
superior court judge in Greensboro.
Although it is
likely that
Tabitha and
Tourgée met, she was not considered...
-
World War I. It
attracted doctors from top schools, such as Dr.
Toussaint Tourgee Tildon, a
graduate of
Harvard Medical School. He was one of the
first six...