HBCU Alumnus, Iconic Civil Rights Attorney Dies at 82

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — James Ferguson II, a trailblazing civil rights attorney and proud Historically Black College and University (HBCU) graduate, has died at 82. His legal victories reshaped education and justice in North Carolina and beyond.

Born in 1942 in segregated Asheville, North Carolina, Ferguson began his journey toward justice as a student activist. He helped desegregate public spaces such as lunch counters and libraries through peaceful protest.

HBCU Education and Legal Foundation

After graduating from North Carolina Central University, an HBCU in Durham, NC, he earned his law degree from Columbia University. He returned to North Carolina and opened his first law office in 1964. Just three years later, he co-founded the state’s first racially integrated law firm with Julius Chambers and Adam Stein.

Landmark Supreme Court Case: Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg

In 1971, Ferguson co-argued the landmark Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education case before the U.S. Supreme Court. The court’s ruling allowed school busing as a tool for desegregation, setting a nationwide precedent. During the trial, Ferguson’s law office was set on fire by an arsonist, but he remained undeterred.

“You look at a situation, you see what needs to be done, and then you do it,” Ferguson said in a later interview. “You never give a lot of thought to the risk.”

Defender of Civil Rights and the Wrongfully Convicted

Throughout the 1970s and beyond, Ferguson took on many of the state’s most significant civil rights cases. He represented the Wilmington 10, a group of activists falsely convicted of arson, and helped secure their pardons decades later. He also defended the Charlotte 3 and Darryl Hunt, a Black man wrongly convicted of murder and later exonerated through DNA evidence.

International Civil Rights Work and Teaching Legacy

James Ferguson II’s commitment to justice reached beyond the U.S. In the 1980s, he traveled to South Africa to train Black lawyers during apartheid…

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