Paul Robeson and the Marquette Law School

Most people remember Paul Robeson as a star of stage and screen and as a controversial African-American civil rights leader of the early and mid-twentieth century.  His performances in “Othello,” “The Emperor Jones,” and “Show Boat” are legendary, as are his renditions of “Old Man River” and the classic Negro spirituals. His support of radical politics and his enthusiasm for the Soviet Union made him a highly controversial figure during the Cold War.

However, before he became famous as an actor and an activist, Robeson was a law student and a professional football player, a combination that brought him to the Marquette College of Law in the fall of 1922.

Here is the story.

Robeson was born in 1898 in Princeton, New Jersey, and came of age at the height of the Jim Crow era in the United States.  He was a superb student in the public schools of Somerville, New Jersey, and he was offered a full academic scholarship by Rutgers University at which he enrolled in 1915.  At the time of his enrollment he was only the third African-American to have attended Rutgers, and he was the only black student at the school during the four years in which he was enrolled.

Few college students have ever excelled at the level at which Robeson performed at Rutgers.  He graduated first in his class; was elected Phi Beta Kappa as a junior; and won the college’s oratory contest each year that he was enrolled.  He also won twelve varsity letters in football, basketball, baseball, and track.  His best sport was football, in which he was a first team All-American end in 1917 and 1918.

After graduating from Rutgers in 1919, he moved to New York where he enrolled at the New York University Law School.  After a semester at NYU, he transferred to Columbia, at least in part because of its proximity to Harlem (and the just-underway Harlem Renaissance).

To support himself while in law school, Robeson played for two seasons in the National Football League (or the American Professional Football Association, as it was initially known.)  In 1921, he played for the Akron Indians, which were led by player-coach Fritz Pollard, the great running back and the first African-American to coach a predominantly white professional team. Robeson, who played in eight of Akron’s 12 games in 1921, apparently commuted to Akron’s weekend games from New York City.

In 1922, Pollard jumped to the Milwaukee Badgers and apparently convinced Robeson to join him.  The Badgers, who joined the NFL that year, played their home games in Borchert Park, the home of the minor league baseball team, the Milwaukee Brewers.  Robeson apparently decided that a weekly commute to Milwaukee would be too difficult, so he took a leave of absence from Columbia Law School that fall.

The 1922 Milwaukee Badgers began their season on October 1.  On October 17, the Milwaukee Journal ran a story under the heading: “Robeson, Giant Pro End, in M.U. Law Dept.”  (Robeson was 6’3” tall and weighed approximately 220 lbs. at that point in his life, which apparently qualified as “giant-size” under the standards of 1922.) The brief story went on to report that Robeson “has taken up a course of review and research work in Marquette university school of law [sic], preparatory to taking the New York state bar examinations late this year.”  Counting his semester at New York University, Robeson had already attended law school for three years, so he was already eligible to take the New York bar examination.  In 1922, most states required applicants for admission to the bar to have only a specific number of years of legal education rather than a law degree.

While the Journal story seems to suggest that Robeson may have enrolled at the law school, the law school bulletins for 1922 and 1923 do not list Robeson as a student in the fall of 1922, and he is similarly absent from the records of the university registrar.

Robeson’s affiliation with the law school was likely somewhat informal. In the 1920’s, several professors at the Marquette Law School offered “bar prep” courses for students who were preparing to take the Wisconsin bar exam.  (The diploma privilege was not extended to Marquette until 1934.)  Normally these classes were held after the end of the academic year and just before the summer bar examination. Such classes were technically not offered by the law school, but by individual professors, and thus were open to anyone interested in taking the Wisconsin bar examination.  (A decade later, criticism led to the law school requesting its faculty to stop doing this.)

Robeson likely worked out a similar arrangement with one of the Marquette law professors, and this is what the newspaper meant when it referred to a “course of review and research work.”  So far as we know, none of the Marquette professors in 1922 were members of the New York bar, but John McDill Fox was a graduate of Harvard Law School who had been successfully passed the Massachusetts bar exam.  Given that Fox was one of the professors who regularly offered bar prep courses to supplement his income, he would seem to be the most likely candidate to have directed Robeson’s studies that fall.

(There is an eerie literary parallel here.  In Eugene O’Neill’s play, “All God’s Chillun Got Wings,” a black law student named Jim Harris struggles desperately to pass his law school exams and secure admission to the bar.  In the play’s first performance in 1924, Robeson was cast in the role of Jim Harris.  There is no reason, however, to believe that Robeson knew about the play in the fall of 1922.)

The article also suggests that in the fall of 1922 Robeson was more concerned about the NY bar exam than credits to graduate from Columbia.  In any event, the Fall 1922 football season turned out to be a disappointment.  Pollard battled injuries throughout the season, and while the Badgers held their opponents to 31 points in their first eight games, they had great difficulty scoring.  For the season the team managed only seven touchdowns, one of which was scored by Robeson on a fumble recovery.  Robeson missed the season opener, then played in seven games before skipping the season finale, a 40-6 trouncing by the Canton Bulldogs.  For the year, the Badgers won two, lost four, and tied three games, with a 10th game rained out but not rescheduled.

After the season, Robeson returned to New York and re-enrolled at Columbia.  He graduated from the law school in the spring of 1923 as a member of a class that also included future U.S. Supreme Court justice William O. Douglas.  Already immersed in his theatrical career, he apparently never got around to taking the New York bar examination, and he never again played in the National Football League.

The Milwaukee Badgers lasted until the end of the 1926 NFL season when they folded after a dismal 2-7-0 season.  In their final year, their roster included third-year Marquette law student Lavvie Dilweg who went on to a highly successful career with the Green Bay Packers and a seat in the United States Congress.

Can we say that Robeson attended the Marquette Law School?  Probably not, but he was one of many fascinating individuals whose lives have intersected with our institution.

This Post Has 2 Comments

  1. John Jacob

    Gordon,

    I enjoyed your post on the about Paul Robeson. Robeson may or may not have developed communist leanings by 1922. If memory serves, however, this was a period when Milwaukee had decades of Socialist mayors with but a single break. This is difficult for me to fathom, as when I was growing up in Green Bay, Milwaukee was known for its large John Birch Society membership, race riots, and bitter school busing disputes.

    W-a-a-a-y back in the mid-70s, when I worked at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, I processed the papers of Frank P.Zeidler, the last socialist mayor of Milwaukee. An interesting side note, Zeidler’s daughter has served as Mayor of Williamsburg, VA since 1998, presumable not as a member of the Socialist Party.

    You will be glad to learn that the Rockbridge Rapids, the local college summer league baseball club, has started play in their second season.

    John

  2. Gordon Hylton

    John, thanks for the kind words. It is also flattering that someone like yourself is finding his way to the Marquette Law School faculty blog.

    You are right that Robeson’s brief stay in Milwaukee coincided with the high point of Socialism in the Cream City. In 1922, Socialist mayor Daniel Webster Hoan was well into his 24 year stint (1916-1940) as the elected leader of the city, and that November, while Robeson was playing for the NFL Badgers, Socialist Victor Berger was returned to the United States Congress to represent Milwaukee.

    Whether Robeson was following Milwuakee politics, or whether his decision to play professional football in Milwaukee was related to its political leanings, is a hard question to answer. As far as I can tell, none of his biographers discuss this — in fact most seem to overlook his Milwaukee fall altogether.

    It seems likely that the reasons he came to Milwaukee were the presence of his former professional coach and teammate, the African-American Fritz Pollard, the team’s willingness to pay him several hundred dollars per game (then good pay for the NFL), and a Rutgers connection that I did not mention in the article.

    Milwaukee Badger head coach Bedge Garrett (who also doubled as a player) was a former Rutgers football player, and two of Robeson’s former Rutgers teammates, Big Jim Dufft and John Alexander, were on the Badgers.

    Interestingly, even though the Milwaukee Journal described the 6’3, 220 lb. Robeson as a “giant”, Dufft, at 6’6, 250 lbs., and Alexander, at 6’4, 234 lbs., were actually larger men than he was.

    There is no evidence that the Marquette Law School of 1922 was a hotbed of socialsim; on the other hand, it was not stridently opposed to socialist government in Milwaukee, and it did have important ties to the Hoan administration. Before he was mayor, Hoan had been elected city attorney (as a Socialist), and from 1914 to 1916, soon-to-be dean of the Marquette Law School Max Schoetz was his number two assistant. Schoetz continued to work for the city on a part-time basis as an attorney after Hoan was elected mayor, as did his law partner and fellow Marquette law professor Clifton Williams. The politics of the rest of the faculty do not seem to have been a major factor in the life of the institution in that era.

    So while the liberal Robeson may well have been in sync politically with Milwaukeeans in 1922, it seems unlikely that that was the reason he decided to play in Milwaukee.

    I remember Frank Zeidler well, but I had no idea that his daughter was the current mayor of Williamsburg. He was the grand old man of Milwaukee public life when I moved there in 1995, and he remained so until his death in 2006, just prior to his 94th birthday.

    Ironically, it was Frank Zeidler’s brother Carl, a Republican and a Marquette Law School graduate, who ended Hoan’s long run as mayor in 1940. Frank, who converted to socialism because of his religious beliefs, supported Hoan in the 1940 election, but the brothers remained on good terms.

    The highly charismatic Carl, known as the “Singing Mayor”, resigned as mayor before the end of his first term to join the Navy and died a few months later as the result of a German U-boat attack. Frank was first elected mayor in 1948.

    Thanks to Hoan and Frank Z., Milwaukee had a socialist mayor all but 8 years between 1916 and 1960. However, the Socialist Party didn’t really dominate the city to the extent that the presence of the Socialist mayors suggests. Hoan, for example, only twice had a Socialist majority of the Common Council and one of those times, it came about because of the shift in affiliations that occurred after the election.

    On the other hand, if Robeson voted in Milwaukee in November, he would almost surely have voted Socialist. As he later proclaimed, “[A] socialist society represents an advance to a higher stage of life — that is, a form of society which is economically, socially, culturally, and ethically superior to a system based upon production for private profit.”

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