Background
Stokes was born in Fredonia, Kansas to a Baptist minister and was raised in Pratt, Kansas.
Stokes was born in Fredonia, Kansas to a Baptist minister and was raised in Pratt, Kansas.
He graduated from the University of Kansas in 1931.
After briefly practicing law for the state"s revenue commission Stokes, in 1943, moved to Seattle, Washington where he entered into private practice. Politics
In 1950 Stokes was elected to the Washington State House of Representatives from Washington"s 37th legislative district as a Republican, becoming the first African-American legislator from King County and just the second in state history. At the end of his first term he was selected "Outstanding Freshman Legislator" by the Young Republican Club.
In 1954 he sought election to the Washington State Senate, but was defeated.
He returned to the House of Representatives in 1956 before being unseated in his 1958 reelection bid by Democrat Sam Smith. In 1960 he ran unsuccessfully for Lieutenant Governor of Washington and, the same year, headed Nelson Rockefeller"s campaign for the Republican presidential nomination in Washington.
During his time in the legislature, Stokes was credited with initiating the idea of a state lottery, and for introducing one of the most sweeping civil rights bills in the state up to that time. After politics
In the years following his exit from politics, Stokes helped co-found KZAM-Department of Administration and Management and Liberty Bank (absorbed into Emerald City Bank in 1988 which, in turn, was taken over by KeyBank).
In 1968 he was appointed to fill a vacancy in a district court judgeship, which he held until 1978, before retiring.