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2006 AAJ Minority Caucus
Johnnie L. Cochran, Jr. Soaring Eagles Award Recipient

The Honorable Matthew J. Perry, Jr.

The AAJ Minority Caucus has chosen to honor Matthew J. Perry, Jr. with the 2006 Johnnie L. Cochran, Jr. Soaring Eagles Award. The award will be presented to Judge Perry at the Minority Caucus reception on July 18, 2006, during AAJ's Annual Convention in Seattle, Washington.

Matthew J. Perry, Jr. was arguably the leading civil rights attorney in South Carolina during the decades of the 1950s, 60s and 70s. According to Judge Perry, he embarked upon his extraordinary career after "a growing awareness of racial injustices, many of them manifested by state laws, led me to conclude that I needed to learn and practice law."

Matthew J. Perry was born in Columbia, South Carolina. After serving in the United States Army during World War II from 1942 to 1946, Perry completed his undergraduate education and decided to study law at South Carolina State College. As a fledgling attorney, Matthew Perry took the cases no one else would dare touch for fear of retribution. His dedication to civil liberties prompted his wife, Hallie Bacote Perry, to say, "He was determined to do the things he needed to do, not only for one race, but for everybody. And he was a gentleman all through the fight."

Perry said his most satisfying case was helping Charleston's Harvey Gantt integrate Clemson University in 1963. This historic case prompted the University of South Carolina to integrate the following year. For his entire body of work, but for this case especially, Perry received numerous death threats, but that did not stop him from proudly leading the caravan to deliver Gantt, later the first black mayor of Charlotte, to his inaugural day as an architecture student at Clemson.

He demonstrated similar success and dogged determination in litigating to create single-member voting districts in South Carolina. The 1972 reapportionment case enabled blacks to be elected to the Legislature in significant numbers for the first time since post Reconstruction. Matthew Perry, himself, ran for Congress in the Second Congressional District in 1974. Although he was unsuccessful, he had already made a lasting mark on South Carolina's political future by ensuring African Americans would have a seat at the table.

Perry had a hand in almost every case that integrated South Carolina's public schools, hospitals, golf courses, restaurants, parks, playgrounds, and beaches. He individually tried 6,000 cases, and his work led to the release of some 7,000 people arrested for sit-in protests.

In 1975 Perry became the first black lawyer from the Deep South to be appointed to the federal bench when President Gerald Ford nominated him to serve on the U.S. Military Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C. Four years later, President Jimmy Carter nominated Judge Perry to the United States District Court in South Carolina, which allowed him to return home. He was appointed senior judge in October 1995 and continues to serve in that capacity today.

Cosmos Broadcasting Company named Perry South Carolinian of the Year in 1977. He is a recipient of the NAACP's William R. Ming Advocacy Award, and was presented the Order of the Palmetto by South Carolina Governor Richard Riley in 1986. He has received South Carolina State's Distinguished Alumnus Award twice, in 1972 and 1980, and received the Spirit of Excellence Award by the American Bar Association Commission on Opportunities for Minorities in 1998. On April 23, 2004, a Federal Courthouse was constructed in Columbia, South Carolina, and named the "Matthew J. Perry, Jr. Courthouse," dedicated in Judge Perry's honor.

Judge Perry is married to the former Hallie Bacote of Timmonsville, and they have a son, Michael. Judge Perry an active member of Zion Baptist Church in Columbia.

All AAJ members attending the AAJ Annual Convention in Seattle are welcome to attend the Minority Caucus reception. If you have any questions, please contact Staff Liaison Kevin Mills at kevin.mills@justice.org or call 800-424-2725, ext. 302, or 202-965-3500, ext. 302

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