Lloyd L. Gaines collection
Documents relating to the 1938 U.S. Supreme Court case, State of Missouri ex rel Gaines v. Canada, which paved the way for a series of cases that would lead to Brown v. Board of Education's outlawing segregation in public education.
More About This Collection
Creator
Gaines, Lloyd Lionel
Date of Original
1911/2006
Subject
African Americans--Missouri
African Americans--Civil rights--Missouri
Civil rights--Missouri
African American college students--Missouri
College students--Missouri
African American law students--Missouri
Law students--Missouri
University of Missouri. School of Law--Trials, litigation, etc.
Law schools--Missouri
Segregation in higher education--Missouri
Discrimination in higher education--Missouri
African American law students--Civil rights--Missouri
United States. Supreme Court
People
Gaines, Lloyd Lionel
Gaines, Lloyd Lionel--Trials, litigation, etc.
Gaines, Lloyd Lionel--Family
Location
United States, District of Columbia, Washington, 38.89511, -77.03637
United States, Missouri, Boone County, 38.99062, -92.30968
United States, Missouri, Boone County, Columbia, 38.95171, -92.33407
United States, Missouri, Cole County, 38.50541, -92.2816
United States, Missouri, Cole County, Jefferson City, 38.5767, -92.17352
Medium
letters (correspondence)
correspondence
black-and-white photographs
legal documents
constitutions
legislative records
Type
StillImage, Text
Description
Lloyd Lionel Gaines was born to the Gaines family in northern Mississippi in 1911. One of eleven children, seven of whom survived illness and accident, he moved with his widowed mother and siblings to St. Louis after the premature death of their father. They found a better, although not easy, life for themselves in Missouri. Gaines excelled in his studies graduating as valedictorian in 1931 from Vashon High School. At Lincoln University in Jefferson City, he graduated with honors and was President of the senior class, while participating in many extra-curricular activities and working to pay for his schooling.
Despite his outstanding scholastic record, the University of Missouri School of Law denied Gaines admittance in 1936 solely on the grounds that Missouri's Constitution called for "separate education of the races." By state law, Missouri would have been required to pay for Gaines to attend the Universities in Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska, but Gaines was determined to fight for the right to attend law school in his own state university. He sought legal assistance from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), which had been working systematically to overturn the ignominious precedent of "separate but equal" established in Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896. Together, they challenged the University of Missouri's admissions policies. In 1938, Gaines won his case before the United States Supreme Court in State of Missouri ex rel Gaines v. Canada, paving the way for a series of cases that would lead to Brown v. Board of Education's outlawing segregation in public education. In March 1939, only three months after his Supreme Court victory, Lloyd Gaines was last seen in Chicago. He disappeared at age 28 with his promise of attending law school in Missouri unfilfilled. Lloyd Gaines was never to be seen or heard from again.
This project seeks to illuminate Lloyd Gaines' life, document his pioneering pursuit of true equal rights to legal education, and memorialize the long overdue, posthumous recognition of his personal sacrifice in the advancement of civil rights. By gathering together primary and secondary source materials pertinent to his life and his case, we hope to tell more of Lloyd Gaines' story to the world. The University of Missouri Law Library is pleased to make these resources freely available for scholars, researchers and others to advance their knowledge and understanding of the struggle for civil rights in Missouri in the early twentieth century.
The Civil Rights Digital Library received support from a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services for the aggregation and enhancement of partner metadata.
Contributing Institution
University of Missouri--Columbia. School of Law. Library