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Judge Louis Arthur Bedford Jr.

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Judge Louis Arthur Bedford Jr. Veteran

Birth
Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, USA
Death
10 Apr 2014 (aged 88)
Dallas County, Texas, USA
Burial
Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Judge Louis A. Bedford, Jr.,

A son, husband, father, friend, attorney/judge, community leader, dedicated man of the church, and mentor.

Louis A. Bedford, Jr., was a simple man, who like a tree stretched out his arms as branches to help others reach their goals. He planted strong roots as a foundation for his family and the legal community. He provided shade for those who needed rest along the journey.

Louis Arthur Bedford, Jr., was born to Callie Rogers and Louis A. Bedford, Sr. on January 23, 1926 in Dallas, Texas. He completed his early education upon graduating from Booker T. Washington High School. Encouraged by his parents, he continued his education at Prairie View A&M University, completing his studies in 1946. Segregation made it impossible for him to pursue a legal education in Texas. His goal to become a lawyer took him to New York, where he earned his law degree from Brooklyn Law School in 1950. Upon graduation, he returned to Dallas. Louis Bedford was admitted into the State Bar of Texas as a licensed attorney in 1951. He was also granted licensure with the U.S. District Court Northern District of Texas (1954), the U.S. Court of Appeals-Fifth Circuit (1956) and the Supreme Court of the United States of America (1979).

In 1954, he worked beside famed Attorney (and future U.S. Supreme Court Justice) Thurgood Marshall, the then top NAACP staff attorney during the first desegregation case to take place in Dallas. He, along with attorneys W.J. Durham and C.B. Bunkley, defended Wiley and Bishop College students arrested while participating in sit-ins. He also served as legal counsel on a case to declare "separate but equal" unconstitutional in Dallas public schools. Louis Bedford became the first Black judge to serve in Dallas County, serving from 1966 until 1980. In 1978, President Jimmy Carter appointed him to the Commission for Nominating Federal Circuit Court Judges for the Fifth Circuit.

Outside the courtroom, he was a community servant. In 1952, Louis Bedford co-founded the J.L. Turner Legal Society, an affiliate of the National Bar Association specifically designed to nurture African American attorneys. He served on several boards and was a member of numerous social, civic and professional organizations. He was a past member of the Board of Directors for the Dallas Bar Association and the Southwest Legal Bar Association. His memberships included Fellows-Dallas Bar Association and Fellows-Texas Bar Association.

In his childhood, he joined New Hope Baptist Church where he was a faithful member until his death. He was also a life member of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. He co-founded Black Dallas Remembered, an organization that documents and chronicles the past and present achievements of Blacks in Dallas.

He was the recipient of many awards. He was most proud of the Gertrude E. Rush Award-National Bar Association, the Justinian Award-Dallas Bar Association and the Dallas Bar Association Morris Harrell Professionalism Award. In 1989, he was one of 12 honorees selected for the "Gallery of Greats: Black Attorneys....Counselors for the Cause," a collection of oil portraits commissioned by the Miller Brewing Company. The collection honoring Black attorneys toured the nation throughout 1989. In 2009, the Dallas Bar Association commissioned Quest for Justice: Louis A. Bedford, Jr. and the Struggle for Equal Rights in Texas, a biography by Darwin Payne.

In 1958, he married Valerie R. Bates of Dallas. They were married for fifty-two years until her death in 2010. He leaves his three children to cherish his memory: Diane Bedford Webster (John) of New York, Louis A. Bedford III, and Angela Bedford Walker (Alfred), of Dallas. Those left to continue his legacy: six grandchildren: Nicole Andrade (Selveno), Simone Webster, all of New York; Louis A. IV, Darcy, Azaria and Alfred II, all of Dallas. He leaves a host of other relatives and friends, including Joye Fridia Hamilton (niece), Mansell and Janis Fridia (nephew and niece) and the entire Bates family. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation in the name of Judge L.A. Bedford, Jr. to Prairie View A&M University, memo "Sports Complex." Mail your donation to PVAMF, 6436 Fannin St., Room 112, Houston, Texas 77030 or you may call (281) 249-5368.

Visitation will be held on Tuesday, April 15, 2014, at the New Hope Baptist Church from 6:30 to 8:00 P.M., located 5002 S. Central Expy, Dallas, Texas 75215. Funeral services will be on Wednesday, April 16, 2014 at 10:00 A.M. at New Hope Baptist followed by graveside services at Lincoln Memorial Park in Dallas.
Judge Louis A. Bedford, Jr.,

A son, husband, father, friend, attorney/judge, community leader, dedicated man of the church, and mentor.

Louis A. Bedford, Jr., was a simple man, who like a tree stretched out his arms as branches to help others reach their goals. He planted strong roots as a foundation for his family and the legal community. He provided shade for those who needed rest along the journey.

Louis Arthur Bedford, Jr., was born to Callie Rogers and Louis A. Bedford, Sr. on January 23, 1926 in Dallas, Texas. He completed his early education upon graduating from Booker T. Washington High School. Encouraged by his parents, he continued his education at Prairie View A&M University, completing his studies in 1946. Segregation made it impossible for him to pursue a legal education in Texas. His goal to become a lawyer took him to New York, where he earned his law degree from Brooklyn Law School in 1950. Upon graduation, he returned to Dallas. Louis Bedford was admitted into the State Bar of Texas as a licensed attorney in 1951. He was also granted licensure with the U.S. District Court Northern District of Texas (1954), the U.S. Court of Appeals-Fifth Circuit (1956) and the Supreme Court of the United States of America (1979).

In 1954, he worked beside famed Attorney (and future U.S. Supreme Court Justice) Thurgood Marshall, the then top NAACP staff attorney during the first desegregation case to take place in Dallas. He, along with attorneys W.J. Durham and C.B. Bunkley, defended Wiley and Bishop College students arrested while participating in sit-ins. He also served as legal counsel on a case to declare "separate but equal" unconstitutional in Dallas public schools. Louis Bedford became the first Black judge to serve in Dallas County, serving from 1966 until 1980. In 1978, President Jimmy Carter appointed him to the Commission for Nominating Federal Circuit Court Judges for the Fifth Circuit.

Outside the courtroom, he was a community servant. In 1952, Louis Bedford co-founded the J.L. Turner Legal Society, an affiliate of the National Bar Association specifically designed to nurture African American attorneys. He served on several boards and was a member of numerous social, civic and professional organizations. He was a past member of the Board of Directors for the Dallas Bar Association and the Southwest Legal Bar Association. His memberships included Fellows-Dallas Bar Association and Fellows-Texas Bar Association.

In his childhood, he joined New Hope Baptist Church where he was a faithful member until his death. He was also a life member of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. He co-founded Black Dallas Remembered, an organization that documents and chronicles the past and present achievements of Blacks in Dallas.

He was the recipient of many awards. He was most proud of the Gertrude E. Rush Award-National Bar Association, the Justinian Award-Dallas Bar Association and the Dallas Bar Association Morris Harrell Professionalism Award. In 1989, he was one of 12 honorees selected for the "Gallery of Greats: Black Attorneys....Counselors for the Cause," a collection of oil portraits commissioned by the Miller Brewing Company. The collection honoring Black attorneys toured the nation throughout 1989. In 2009, the Dallas Bar Association commissioned Quest for Justice: Louis A. Bedford, Jr. and the Struggle for Equal Rights in Texas, a biography by Darwin Payne.

In 1958, he married Valerie R. Bates of Dallas. They were married for fifty-two years until her death in 2010. He leaves his three children to cherish his memory: Diane Bedford Webster (John) of New York, Louis A. Bedford III, and Angela Bedford Walker (Alfred), of Dallas. Those left to continue his legacy: six grandchildren: Nicole Andrade (Selveno), Simone Webster, all of New York; Louis A. IV, Darcy, Azaria and Alfred II, all of Dallas. He leaves a host of other relatives and friends, including Joye Fridia Hamilton (niece), Mansell and Janis Fridia (nephew and niece) and the entire Bates family. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation in the name of Judge L.A. Bedford, Jr. to Prairie View A&M University, memo "Sports Complex." Mail your donation to PVAMF, 6436 Fannin St., Room 112, Houston, Texas 77030 or you may call (281) 249-5368.

Visitation will be held on Tuesday, April 15, 2014, at the New Hope Baptist Church from 6:30 to 8:00 P.M., located 5002 S. Central Expy, Dallas, Texas 75215. Funeral services will be on Wednesday, April 16, 2014 at 10:00 A.M. at New Hope Baptist followed by graveside services at Lincoln Memorial Park in Dallas.


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