[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 104 (Thursday, July 12, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4943-S4944]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO JUDGE GEORGE LEIGHTON
Mr. DURBIN. The Cook County Criminal Courts Building in Chicago is an
imposing building at the intersection of 26th Street and California
Avenue that has long been known by its address: 26th and Cal. Last
month, the Criminal Courts Building was renamed the Honorable George N.
Leighton Criminal Court Building in tribute to a remarkable man.
Judge George Leighton, who turns 100 years old this October, has
excelled as a lawyer and judge and has embodied the ideals of the
American dream.
George Leighton was born in 1912 in New Bedford, MA, to African
immigrants. As a young boy, Judge Leighton picked fruit for several
months each year to help support his family. Then just before he should
have started seventh grade, he left school to take a job on an oil
tanker in the Dutch West Indies.
George Leighton never finished grade school or high school, but he
heard that a scholarship fund was offering a $200 scholarship for the
winner of an essay contest, and he submitted the winning essay. In
1936, with his $200 scholarship, he hitchhiked to Washington, D.C., to
attend college. He was granted conditional admittance to Howard
University, where he graduated magna cum laude 4 years later.
In 1940, George Leighton joined the United States Army's 93rd
Infantry Division. When he returned to the United States after the war,
he was accepted at Harvard Law School. He graduated from Harvard and
passed the Illinois State Bar Examination.
He then moved to Chicago because he was impressed that Chicago had
elected an African American congressman, William Dawson. He set up a
law practice next to the old Comiskey Park on
[[Page S4944]]
Chicago's South Side. And he began fighting courageously to break down
barriers of racial discrimination in voting, housing and education.
In 1949, George Leighton became an Assistant Illinois Attorney
General. When he advised one group of African-Americans that the law
did not prohibit them from moving to the Cicero neighborhood, an all-
white neighborhood at the time, race riots erupted. Judge Leighton was
indicted for inciting the riot. An up-and-coming lawyer named Thurgood
Marshall came to the defense of Judge Leighton, argued the case, and
the indictment was dismissed.
In 1964, Mayor Daley asked Leighton to run for circuit court judge,
and he won the election in a landslide. He then moved into his office
at 26th and Cal, the Cook County Criminal Courts Building.
In 1969, Judge Leighton was appointed to the First District Appellate
Court of Illinois, where he served as the first African-American judge
on the Illinois Court of Appeals. Six years later, he was nominated by
President Gerald Ford to serve as U.S. District court judge for the
Northern District of Illinois.
George Leighton has been a life-long champion of civil rights and
equality. There is no more fitting a tribute than to name the building
in which Judge Leighton first began practicing law some 66 years ago in
his honor.
Judge Leighton contributed to our understanding of justice. He stood
up to powerful interests in defense of the truth and did not bend to
pressure or prejudice in his pursuit of justice. He served the people
of Illinois and the citizens of the United States proudly throughout
his tenure on the bench.
I thank Judge George Leighton for his service and join the Chicago
community in congratulating him on this new honor.
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