Thurgood Marshall’s Harlem
Forty-five years ago today, on August 30, 1967, Thurgood Marshall was confirmed as the first African American Supreme Court justice. Prior to serving on the Supreme Court, Marshall was most famous as chief counsel of the NAACP, based primarily in New York City. As the NAACP’s attorney, Marshall argued 32 cases in front of the U.S. Supreme Court (winning 29 of them), most notably Brown v. Board of Education, which struck down the notion of “separate but equal” in public school education and beyond.
For many years, the NAACP was headquartered at 224 West 135th Street, near Adam Clayton Powell Jr Blvd. In many ways, 135th Street was the most important street in the neighborhood. In addition to the NAACP, it was home to the YMCA, where many Harlemites stayed when they first arrived in New York, and was the epicenter of theaters and clubs where the Harlem Renaissance flowered. At the corner of 135th and Adam Clayton Powell was once a nightclub called Small’s Paradise, famous for its rolling skating wait staff. Small’s is long gone — today the building houses an IHOP — but above it is the Thurgood Marshall Academy, one of the best high schools in the area.