Background
Douglas was born in Newellton in northern Tensas Parish in northeastern Louisiana to Samuel Frederick Douglas and the former Fannie Rose Armstrong.
Douglas was born in Newellton in northern Tensas Parish in northeastern Louisiana to Samuel Frederick Douglas and the former Fannie Rose Armstrong.
He was educated at the segregated since defunct black schools in Newellton and from Tensas Rosenwald in Saint Joseph, now Tensas High School. Brimmer then attended the historically black Roman Catholic-affiliated Xavier University in New Orleans.
The institutions closed in 1970, when Tensas Parish public schools were desegregated. Thereafter, Douglas entered the United States Army, where he reached the rank of master sergeant. From 1950–1952, he was stationed in Anchorage, Alaska, and Fort Worth, Texas.
Thereafter, he was a letter carrier for the United States. Postal Service and a salesman for Southern Barber and Beauty Supply Company in Baton Rouge.
On July 24, 1949, in New Roads, the seat of Pointe Coupee Parish, Douglas married the former Audrey Marie Daisy (1920–1991), daughter of farmer Thomas Daisy (1898–1975) and the former Lillian Pourclau (1897–1985). The Douglases had one child, Kordice Majella Douglas (born 1955).
Kordice Douglas is a graduate of the Harvard Law School and practices law in Baton Rouge. He headed the New Roads National Association for the Advancement of Colored People from 1965–1981 and served on the national board of the organization from 1967–1981.
Governor Edwin Washington Edwards appointed Douglas to the Prison System Study Commission.
He served in 1975 on the Commission on Judicial Compensation for City, Parish, and Municipal Courts. He had lived in New Orleans from 1942–1946 and in Baton Rouge from 1946–1949. He was a district manager for Standard Life Insurance Company and Supreme Life Insurance Company and the proprietor of Douglas Barber and Beauty Supply Company and Douglas Fine Foods Grocery, both in Baton Rouge.
Douglas pushed to accelerate school desegregation, a gradual process completed in all sixty-four parishes by August 1970, including Douglas" native Tensas Parish, which is predominantly African American.
In 1970, Douglas was arrested when he attempted to dine at an all-white establishment in Baton Rouge. The incident occurred six years after passage of the Civil Rights Acting of 1964.
Douglas retained as his attorney Murphy Bell, also a former National Association for the Advancement of Colored People state president In 1976, Douglas quarreled at the national National Association for the Advancement of Colored People convention in Memphis, Tennessee, with executive director Roy Wilkins, who postponed his planned retirement from the organization by an additional year.
Wilkins criticized certain board members as having conducted a "campaign of vilification" against him, questioning his integrity, health, and competence.
Wilkins had threatened lawsuits against the offenders. Douglas took a microphone and rebuked Wilkins: "I resent allegations against board members unless they are named." Douglas died at the age of fifty-four of a heart attack at New Roads General Hospital. Douglas is honored by the naming of the Emmitt J. Douglas Park on Tenth Street in New Roads.
Douglas was active in Democratic politics at a time when his party dominated most of his native state.