Antelope Valley Press

Justice Thurgood Marshall’s wife ‘Cissy’ dies at 94

-

WASHINGTON (AP) — Cecilia “Cissy” Suyat Marshall, the wife of the late Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall who worked alongside the civil rights champion at the NAACP, died, Tuesday, at the age of 94, the Supreme Court announced.

Marshall’s husband became the high court’s first Black justice, in 1967, following a career as a civil rights lawyer in which he argued the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case that outlawed segregatio­n in public schools. He retired from the high court, in 1991 and died in 1993, at the age of 84.

Cecilia Suyat was born in Hawaii, on July 20, 1928. She later moved to New York City and took night classes at Columbia University to become a stenograph­er. An employment office sent her, in 1948, to work at the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People.

“The clerk, she saw my dark skin, and she sent me to the national office of the NAACP,” she said in a 2016 interview. “That is the only reason I can think of that she sent me to the NAACP for my first job. And to this day, I thank her, because had it not been for her, I wouldn’t have known anything about a race problem.”

Suyat, who was of Filipino descent, said that “having been born in the Hawaiian islands we never had that racial problems, and so working with the NAACP opened my eyes.”

It was also at the NAACP that she met her future husband. She worked on a variety of cases and was there for the case of the socalled Groveland Four, the four young Black men falsely accused of raping a white woman in Florida. She also helped take notes and type briefs as Marshall prepared for arguments in the Brown v. Board of education case, which was argued in 1952 and 1953.

In interviews later in life, she recalled the celebratio­n after Brown was decided.

“I don’t know about you fools,” she recalled Marshall saying at some point during the festivitie­s, “but I’m going back to work. Our work has just begun.”

Marshall’s first wife, Vivien Burey, died of cancer, in 1955. He and Suyat married later that year. She left the NAACP after they wed.

But the marriage almost didn’t happen, she said, and not because of their 20-year age difference. She said many people still considered her to be “a foreigner,” and she worried about the reaction. “When Thurgood proposed I said, ‘No way,’” she recalled, in 2013. She said he insisted: “I’m marrying you. I’m not marrying the country and they’re not marrying me.”

They had two sons, Thurgood Jr. and John. It wasn’t until just before Marshall joined the Supreme Court that the justices ruled in Loving v. Virginia that laws in 16 states barring interracia­l marriage could not stand.

In a statement, Chief Justice John Roberts called Cissy Marshall a “vibrant and engaged member of the Court family” who regularly attended court events. “You wanted to sit next to her at any event,” he wrote. “She had an easy sense of humor that could be — in an appropriat­e setting, of course — a bit saucy.”

Justice Elena Kagan, who was a law clerk to Marshall, called Cissy Marshall a “marvelous woman” and wrote: “Every clerk to Justice Marshall received a sort of bonus: the steadfast friendship and support of his wife Cissy.”

The Supreme Court said funeral arrangemen­ts were pending.

 ?? MATTHEW S. GUNBY/AP PHOTO ?? Cecilia Marshall, widow of Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, laughs while watching a slide show about her husband during a meeting to rally support for renaming Baltimore-Washington Internatio­nal Airport after Thurgood Marshall, one of the state’s most famous native sons and the first Black justice on the US Supreme Court, in 2005, in Annapolis, Md.
MATTHEW S. GUNBY/AP PHOTO Cecilia Marshall, widow of Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, laughs while watching a slide show about her husband during a meeting to rally support for renaming Baltimore-Washington Internatio­nal Airport after Thurgood Marshall, one of the state’s most famous native sons and the first Black justice on the US Supreme Court, in 2005, in Annapolis, Md.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States