Who was J.R. Clifford?
John Robert Clifford was West Virginia’s first African-American
attorney, a newspaper publisher, editor and writer, a schoolteacher and
principal, a civil rights pioneer, a founding member of the Niagara
Movement (forerunner to the NAACP), a Civil War veteran, and a graduate
of Storer College.
Clifford was born in 1848,
near what is now Moorefield, West Virginia. At 15, he enlisted in the United States Colored
Troops and fought for the Union Army in the Civil War. After the war, he
attended Storer College in Harper’s Ferry and went on to become a
schoolteacher and principal at the Sumner School in Martinsburg. In 1882, he started
publishing the State’s first minority-owned, minority-focused newspaper:
The Pioneer Press. Clifford stopped publishing The Pioneer
Press in 1917.
In 1887, Clifford was admitted to
the bar by the West Virginia Supreme Court. In 1898, Clifford won a
landmark civil-rights-in-education case before the West Virginia Supreme
Court of Appeals: Williams v. Board of Education. The Tucker
County School Board of Education tried to cut the public school year for
African-American students from nine months to five months, while the students
in the “white school” continued to receive the full nine-month school
year. Clifford encouraged the teacher, Carrie Williams, to continue
teaching for the entire nine months and, together, they filed a lawsuit
against the school board for her back pay. In the end,
the West
Virginia Supreme Court of
Appeals upheld the decision to provide equal
educational rights to
African-American students in West Virginia. All this occurred well over
50 years before the landmark “Brown v. Board of Education”
decision and was one of the few civil rights victories in a southern
state’s highest court before the turn of the century.

After his legal triumph,
Clifford went on to help found the “Niagara Movement” in 1906. The
Niagara Movement was a cornerstone of the 20th Century civil
rights movement and a forerunner to the modern NAACP. Clifford helped
organize the first American Niagara meeting at his alma mater, Storer
College, with the help of Niagara member W.E.B. DuBois.
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