Eunice Carter, the first Female African-American Prosecutor

Grand Old Partisan celebrates more than seventeen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. Today, I honor Eunice Carter, born July 16th 1899. Her parents were a national leader of the Young Men’s Christian Association and a suffragist. Democrat oppression led the family to flee Atlanta, to Brooklyn. Governor Calvin Coolidge advised her at Smith College. In 1932, she became the first Black woman to graduate from Fordham Law School.

Two years later, as the Republican nominee, Carter only narrowly lost election for the state house. A year after that, Fiorello LaGuardia, the Republican Mayor of New York, named her assistant district attorney in the so-called "women’s court".

Carter noticed that most prostitutes had the same attorneys and bail bondsmen. Further investigation revealed that they paid half their earnings to Lucky Luciano in return for legal representation. In effect, Luciano was their employer. She and her boss, district attorney Thomas Dewey, successfully prosecuted the case and saw the Mafia kingpin sentenced to prison.

Carter supported Dewey in his successful campaign for governor and two campaigns as the Republican presidential nominee. She "always suspected the motives of Democrats, whom she viewed as the party of racist mischief and dirty tricks" and "despised the Democrats for the many long years during which they controlled Congress and the White House yet refused to so much as bring any civil rights legislation to a vote."

Carter was "one of the most prominent black women in the United States during the 1930s and 1940s." Later years, she remained active with the National Council of Negro Women, the United Nations, the NAACP and the Young Women’s Christian Association.

Back to Basics for the Republican Party is my civil rights history of the GOP. To quote the book: "The more we Republicans know about the history of our party, the more Democrats will worry about the future of theirs. For more information, see www.grandoldpartisan.com

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Michael Zak is author of Back to Basics for the Republican Party, a history of GOP civil rights achievement.


Each day, his YouTube videos and TikTok videos and Rumble videos and Grand Old Partisan blog celebrate more than seventeen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. And, see Speech Raves for audience feedback from his presentations in thirty-one states.

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