#4384d – 2009 42c Civil Rights Pioneers: Charles Hamilton Houston and Walter White

Condition
Price
Qty
- Mint Stamp(s)
Ships in 1-3 business days.i$2.50
$2.50
- Used Single Stamp(s)
Ships in 1-3 business days.i$2.00
$2.00
1 More - Click Here
Mounts - Click Here
Condition
Price
Qty
- MM642215x41mm 15 Horizontal Strip Black Split-Back Mounts
Ships in 1-3 business days.i
$8.25
$8.25
- MM212650x41mm 2 Horizontal Black Split-Back Mounts
Ships in 1-3 business days.i
$1.00
$1.00

Civil Rights Pioneers
Charles Hamilton Houston and Walter White

Issue Date: February 21, 2009
City: New York, NY
Printed By: Avery Dennison
Printing Method: Photogravure
Perforations: Serpentine die cut 10 ¾
Color: Multicolored
  Known as “The Man Who Killed Jim Crow,” Charles Hamilton Houston was involved in almost every Supreme Court civil rights case between 1930 and 1954.   Houston (1895-1950) dedicated his life to representing the oppressed.  Houston followed the case of Micajah Walker, who escaped a brutal lynching by killing his white attacker.  Following Walker’s conviction, Houston decided the training of black lawyers was key to attacking institutional racism.  One of his most influential cases was that of Lloyd Gaines.  The Supreme Court determined the University of Missouri’s segregation policy was unconstitutional. Walter White (1893-1955) served as executive director of the NAACP for twenty-five years.  White organized and led crusades for federal laws against lynching, desegregation of the Armed Forces, and the Fair Employment Practices Act.  Under his leadership, the NAACP established the Legal Defense Fund that was victorious in the milestone school segregation case, Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision. As a young black leader in the organization, White used his fair skin, blond hair, and blue eyes covertly to investigate 41 lynchings and race riots in the U.S.  More than once, White narrowly escaped death after vigilantes discovered his true identity.
Read More - Click Here


Civil Rights Pioneers
Charles Hamilton Houston and Walter White

Issue Date: February 21, 2009
City: New York, NY
Printed By: Avery Dennison
Printing Method: Photogravure
Perforations: Serpentine die cut 10 ¾
Color: Multicolored

 

Known as “The Man Who Killed Jim Crow,” Charles Hamilton Houston was involved in almost every Supreme Court civil rights case between 1930 and 1954.

  Houston (1895-1950) dedicated his life to representing the oppressed.  Houston followed the case of Micajah Walker, who escaped a brutal lynching by killing his white attacker.  Following Walker’s conviction, Houston decided the training of black lawyers was key to attacking institutional racism. 

One of his most influential cases was that of Lloyd Gaines.  The Supreme Court determined the University of Missouri’s segregation policy was unconstitutional.

Walter White (1893-1955) served as executive director of the NAACP for twenty-five years.  White organized and led crusades for federal laws against lynching, desegregation of the Armed Forces, and the Fair Employment Practices Act.  Under his leadership, the NAACP established the Legal Defense Fund that was victorious in the milestone school segregation case, Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision.

As a young black leader in the organization, White used his fair skin, blond hair, and blue eyes covertly to investigate 41 lynchings and race riots in the U.S.  More than once, White narrowly escaped death after vigilantes discovered his true identity.