Inscription
(Front) Jonathan Jasper Wright (1840-1885), the first African American in the U.S. to sit as a justice on a state supreme court, practiced law here from 1877 until his death in 1885. Wright, a native of Pa., was educated at Lancasterian Academy in Ithaca, N.Y. He came to S.C. in 1865 as a teacher for the American Missionary Association and also worked as an attorney for the Freedmen’s Bureau.
(Reverse) Wright wrote that he hoped to “vindicate the cause of the downtrodden.” He was a delegate to the S.C. constitutional convention of 1868 and a state senator 1868-70. Wright, elected to the S.C. Supreme Court in 1870, resigned in 1877 due to political pressure. After he left the bench he practiced law, helped Claflin College found its Law Department, and became its Chair in Law.
He died of tuberculosis in 1885. Sponsored by the S.C. Black Lawyers Association, 2013
Location
Sources
More markers in Charleston
Battle of Lenud’s Ferry
Here, on May 6, 1780, Col. A. M. White was routed by Tarleton with the loss of 2 officers and 36 men killed and wounded and 7 officers...
Mepkin Plantation
Home of Henry Laurens, born in Charleston in 1724, died at Mepkin in 1792.
Biggin Church Ruins*
Moncks Corner, SC
(Front) These ruins are all that remains of Biggin Church, built soon after the American Revolution as the parish church of St. John’s...
Quenby Bridge
Huger, SC
At this bridge, on July 17, 1781, British forces under Col. Coates, who was retreating from Moncks Corner, encountered pursuing Americans...
Pompion Hill Chapel
Huger, SC
One quarter mile north, the first Church of England edifice outside Charleston was erected of cypress in 1703, largely through the...
