By The Related Press
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Present and former Virginia elected leaders talking at this weekend’s service for the primary Black mayor of Richmond recalled Henry L. Marsh III’s trailblazing profession and his lifetime dedication to civil rights.
Lots of of individuals attended the Feb. 1 funeral at a Richmond-area church for Marsh, who died Jan. 23 at age 91, in keeping with the Manning Funeral Residence. Richmond was the previous capital of the Confederacy.
Marsh, who was born in Richmond and educated in segregated colleges, devoted a lot of his work to dismantling racial segregation in colleges, authorities and the office.
“He noticed injustice and he did one thing about it,” U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., informed mourners, the Richmond Instances-Dispatch reported.
Marsh was elected to the Richmond Metropolis Council in 1966. 4 years later, he grew to become vice mayor. In 1977, town council made him town’s first Black mayor. On the time, the mayor and vice mayor have been appointed by town council.
After a single time period as mayor, Marsh was elected to the Virginia state Senate in 1991 and represented the sixteenth District for 22 years earlier than resigning.
Marsh’s deal with dismantling segregation was honored in 2020 when Richmond’s faculty board renamed the elementary faculty he attended for him.
“He taught us it’s one factor to have energy, and it’s one other to make use of it,” Dwight Jones, Richmond’s mayor from 2009 to 2016, mentioned on Feb. 1. “He modified the trajectory of town.”
Throughout his eulogy, U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., himself a former Richmond mayor and civil rights lawyer, recounted Marsh’s mentorship.
As a pupil at Virginia Union College, Marsh testified earlier than state lawmakers to oppose Virginia sustaining separate public colleges for Blacks and whites.
Marsh then attended Howard College legislation faculty, sharing a room with L. Douglas Wilder, who adopted Marsh as Richmond’s mayor and later grew to become the nation’s first Black governor.
Marsh joined with Samuel L. Tucker to kind a legislation agency in 1961. Collectively, they received authorized battles involving Philip Morris and seniority for Black workers, and the institution of single-member districts in each chambers of the Basic Meeting.
Scott mentioned Feb. 1 that Marsh was lead lawyer on practically 50 lawsuits to finish segregated colleges in Virginia.
Marsh was later appointed by then-Gov. Terry McAuliffe as commissioner of the state’s Division of Alcohol Beverage Management.
Marsh’s spouse, Diane, a dentist, died in 2020. His survivors embody three youngsters, six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.