Lawrence Otis Graham (December 25, 1961 – February 19, 2021) was an American attorney, political analyst, cultural influencer and celebrated New York Times best-selling author.[1]
Early life and education
Born on December 25, 1961, to Richard and Betty Graham, the story of the life of Lawrence Otis Graham began rooted in the segregated Jim Crow era of the south, where his Memphis, Tennessee-born parents were raised and his grandparents owned and operated a trucking company.
At five-years-old, Larry's parents engaged a bold barrier-breaking mission purposed to find and acquire a residential family home in a then-mostly Caucasian-filled suburban Westchester CountyNew York City neighborhood.[2]
"We were the only black family in our all-white upper middle-class White Plains neighborhood in the 1960s and 1970s."[3]
Those were the grounds that influenced Lawrence Otis Graham's lifetime efforts dedicated to the pursuit of racial equality and justice.[4][5]
Graham went on to attend Princeton University,[10] where he majored in English, was a member of Whig-Clio and the Carl A. Fields Center (formally, the Third World Center), and was recognized as an active in social-justice issues.[11] After graduating Princeton with a Bachelor of Arts in English,[12][13] Graham went on to earn a Juris Doctor degree from Harvard Law School in 1988.[14] Afterwards, he practiced as a corporate lawyer in Manhattan.
Graham's book The Senator and The Socialite: the Story of America’s First Black Political Dynasty (HarperCollins) is a biography of U.S. SenatorBlanche Bruce, the first black person to serve a full term in the U.S. Senate. Graham is also the author of such books as The Best Companies for Minorities (Penguin Books) and Proversity: Getting Past Face Value (John Wiley & Sons)—two guides on diversity in the workplace—as well as Member of the Club (HarperCollins) which was originally a cover story on New York Magazine, and was later optioned for a feature film by Warner Brothers. Denzel Washington was scheduled to play Graham but the film was never made.[18]
The wedding of Graham and Pamela Thomas-Graham took place at a Catholic church on Fifth Avenue in midtown Manhattan.[21][22] "He took his wedding guests by limousine to a reception where the band played Gershwin and Cole Porter," Malcolm Gladwell wrote of the Graham wedding. "And when some of his black friends asked him (Lawrence Otis Graham) when the black music was starting he smiled and told them: "This is it."
On Friday May 19, 2023, Westchester County held a dedication event of the Graham Garden and Memorial in the Kensico Dam Plaza[27] in honor of the life and legacy of Lawrence Otis Graham for his lifelong public service and commitment to racial equity.[28]
Books
Graham's books centralize on African-American social class.
The Senator and the Socialite: The True Story of America's First Black Dynasty (2006)[29] – This is the true story of America's first black dynasty and follows three generations of a family that rose from slavery to the U.S. Senate. Born a Mississippislave in 1841, Blanche Kelso Bruce amassed a real estate fortune and became the first black person to serve a full Senate term. He married Josephine Willson, the daughter of a wealthy black doctor, and they broke racial barriers as a Gilded Agehigh societysocialite couple in 1880s Washington, D.C. By hosting white Republicans like President Ulysses S. Grant and notable black people such as Frederick Douglass, Bruce gained appointments under four Presidents, culminating with a US Treasury post which placed his name on all U.S. currency.[30]
Our Kind of People: Inside America's Black Upper Class (1999)[31] – Debutante cotillions. Million-dollar homes. Summers in Martha's Vineyard and Sag Harbor. Membership in The Links, Jack and Jill, Deltas, Boulé, and AKAs. An obsession with the right schools, families, churches, social clubs, and skin complexion. This is the world of the African-American upper class and the focus of the first book written about the black elite by a member of this hard-to-penetrate group.[30] A television series based on the book began airing on the Fox network in the fall of 2021.[16][17]
Proversity: Getting Past Face Value (1997)[32][33]
Member of The Club: Reflections on Life in a Polarized World (1995)[34] – Member of the Club was Graham's eleventh book, but it was the one that brought national recognition to his essays on race, class and politics. It's known for revealing Graham's experience of leaving his successful corporate law practice at one of New York's largest law firms in order to go undercover as a busboy at a famous Connecticut country club that discriminates against African Americans, Asians, Hispanics, Jews, and women. An excerpt of this book appeared in a cover story for New York magazine.[35][18]