Whitney North Seymour Sr. (January 4, 1901 – May 21, 1983) was an American attorney who worked primarily as a trial lawyer. He served as assistant solicitor general during the presidency of Herbert Hoover. In 1960, he was elected the 84th president of the American Bar Association. Seymour served for many years as the managing partner of the law firm Simpson Thacher & Bartlett.[1]
Biography
Seymour was born on January 4, 1901, in Chicago, the son of Charles Walton Seymour, a prominent lecturer and educator, and Margaret Lucinda Rugg. He married Lola Virginia Vickers in New York in 1922, and they had two sons, Whitney Jr. and Thaddeus.[2]
Seymour, who grew up in Madison, Wisconsin completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Wisconsin. He graduated with a B.A. in 1919 and received an honorary L.L.D. in 1962. He attended Columbia Law School from which he received his law degree in 1923 and an honorary L.L.D. in 1960.
In his practice, he specialized in trial work and appellate litigation. He argued more than fifty cases before the United States Supreme Court. Seymour was considered an expert on antitrust law and civil liberties. He was committed to issues of civil rights and served on the board of the American Civil Liberties Union. Seymour defended a young black communist, Angelo Herndon, convicted in the 1930s of violating Georgia's anti-insurrection law largely because he had communist literature in his room. He won an appeal in the U.S. Supreme Court.
^ ab"Whitney N. Seymour, Civil Rights Champion". Miami Herald. Associated Press. May 22, 1983. Retrieved 2012-10-13. Whitney North Seymour, Sr., a lawyer and civil-rights champion, died Saturday of cancer. He was 82. From 1931 to 1933, he served as U.S. assistant solicitor general. Mr. Seymour defended a young black Communist, Angelo Herndon, convicted in the 1930s of violating Georgia's anti- insurrection law largely because he had Communist literature in his room. He won an appeal in the U.S. Supreme Court. Mr. Seymour served as president of the American Bar Association, the ...