Ernest A. Finney, Jr.

Ernest A. Finney, Jr.
Chief Justice of South Carolina
In office
December 1994  March 23, 2000
Preceded by A. Lee Chandler
Succeeded by Jean H. Toal
Associate Justice of South Carolina
In office
1985  December 1994
Preceded by Julius B. Ness
Succeeded by E. C. Burnett, III
Personal details
Born (1931-03-23) March 23, 1931
Smithfield, Virginia
Alma mater Claflin College (B.A. 1952)
South Carolina State University (J.D. 1954)

Ernest Adolphus Finney, Jr.[1] (born March 23, 1931) was the first African-American Supreme Court Justice appointed to the South Carolina Supreme Court since the Reconstruction Era. He currently resides in Sumter, South Carolina. He is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.

Early life, education

Finney was born in Smithfield, Virginia. His mother died when he was ten days old, so he was raised by his father, Dr. Ernest A. Finney, Sr. Finney earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Claflin College in 1952. He then enrolled in South Carolina State College's School of Law, from which he graduated in 1954. In the beginning, he was unable to find work as a lawyer, so he followed in his father's footsteps and worked as a teacher. In 1960, he moved to Sumter and began a full-time law practice.[2]

In 1961, Finney represented the Friendship 9, a group of black junior college students arrested and charged when trying to desegregate McCrory’s lunch counter in Rock Hill, South Carolina.[3] In 1963, he served as chairman of the South Carolina Commission on Civil Rights. Finney was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives in 1972. He was subsequently appointed a member of the House Judiciary Committee, making him the first African-American to serve on that key committee in modern times. Finney was one of the founders of the Legislative Black Caucus and served as charter Chairperson from 1973 to 1975. Among Finney's other accomplishments are also a position on the National College of State Trial Judges, 1977; Honorary Doctor of Laws Degree, The Citadel & Johnson C. Smith University, 1995; Doctor of Humane Letters, SC State University, 1996; Doctor of Laws, Morris College, 1996; Doctorate, Claflin University; Honoree, S.C. Trial Lawyers Association, 1993; elected and qualified Judge of the Third Judicial Circuit, 1976; and elected and qualified Associate Justice, 1985.[2]

In May 1994, the state's general assembly elected Ernest Finney to the position of Chief Justice of the State Supreme Court, effective December 1994, making him the first African-American Chief Justice of South Carolina since Reconstruction. In 1976, he won an election to become South Carolina's first black circuit judge. He has been on the state Supreme Court since 1985.[2]

Finney retired from the state Supreme Court in 2000 and was named interim president of South Carolina State University in 2002.[2]

In 2015, Finney represented the surviving eight members of the Friendship Nine at the court hearing where their convictions were overturned.[4]

Family

Finney's daughter, Nikky Finney, is an award-winning poet and professor at the University of South Carolina.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 SC African-American History Online
  2. Michael Scoggins and David Rawlinson, "Rock Hill, Jail no Bail & the Friendship Nine", Friendship College. Retrieved 19 January 2012.
  3. Amber Payne (January 28, 2015). "'Friendship Nine': Convictions Overturned For Famed Civil Rights Protesters". NBC News. Associated Press. Retrieved 2015-01-28.
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