Samuel Field Phillips was a civil rights pioneer, lawyer, politician, and the second United States. Solicitor General.
Background
Samuel Phillips was born in New York City. His father, James Phillips, was a British mathematician. When Samuel was about two years of age his father became the first professor of mathematics at the newly formed University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (University of North Carolina) and the family moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Education
Samuel Phillips graduated from University of North Carolina with highest honors in 1841, earning a master’s degree three years later. He began his own law practice in North Carolina and joined the University of North Carolina law department as a tutor before embarking on a career in politics, beginning with his election as a Whig to the North Carolina General Assemblies of 1852 and 1854. Phillips served on North Carolina"s state court of claims in 1861, and as state auditor from 1862-1864.
Career
He took part in the landmark civil rights case, Plessy v. Ferguson. In 1864, Phillips was re-elected to the General Assembly, serving as Speaker of the House in 1866. In 1866 Phillips left politics to return to the private practice of law.
In the Fall of 1867 he moved his family to Raleigh, North Carolina, where he became North Carolina"s Supreme Court Reporter.
He returned to politics in 1870. In 1871, Phillips served another term in the North Carolina House of Representatives.
In 1872, Phillips was appointed the second United States. Solicitor General by President Ulysses South. Grant, serving in this position from November 1872 to May 1885. During Phillips’s twelve and one-half years as solicitor general, he served under four presidents: Grant, Hayes, Garfield, and Arthur.
Phillips argued the constitutionality of the 1871 Enforcement Acting and advocated upholding a conviction of several Ku Klux Klan members who assaulted a black man for voting in a congressional election.
Citing Article I of the United States. Constitution, he set a precedent used in the 1960s to validate the expansion of federal control over the election process. He also argued Reynolds v. United States, 98 United States. 145 (1879).
Phillips was part of the team who argued the Civil Rights Cases of 1883, using both the Civil Rights Acting of 1875 and the 13th and 14th Amendments as a defense.
As part of the legal counsel representing Homer Plessy in the landmark Plessy v. Ferguson case, he argued that the “separate-but-equal” doctrine was nothing less than a disparagement of African-Americans on the basis of color, much like slavery.
Phillips returned to private law practice in Washington, District of Columbia until 1901. Phillips married Frances R. Lucas (1831–1883), on December 3, 1849, at Chapel Hill.
They had 10 children.
In 1889 Phillips married Sarah Maury. She died in 1902. They had no children. Samuel Phillips died on November 18, 1903, aged 79, in Washington, District of Columbia His body was later moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Politics
Phillips had been an opponent of secession and during the United States. Civil War he became a member of the "Peace Party" of newspaper publisher William Woods Holden (1818–1892), whose 1863 "peace meetings" across North Carolina urged the state to stop fighting the Civil War.
Membership
He was a member of the first "Reconstruction Convention," and joined the Republican Party, which earned him much condemnation as a "scalawag." He fought for the expansion of legal rights for African-Americans, triumphing in granting freedmen the right to testify in cases in which they were parties. After serving as Solicitor General, he went on to become a member of the United States. and Venezuela Mixed Claims Commissions of 1888 and 1891.