Did the Smithsonian shun Clarence Thomas?

Georgia native left out of African-American museum
In this Jan. 26, 2012 file photo, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas speaks at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)

Credit: Michael Dwyer

Credit: Michael Dwyer

In this Jan. 26, 2012 file photo, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas speaks at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)

In October 1991, Clarence Thomas was forever sealed in American consciousness when he was confirmed as the second African-American associate justice of the United States Supreme Court.

With 25 years on the bench, the Georgia-born jurist has now served one year longer than the man he replaced — Thurgood Marshall, who was the highest court’s first black justice.

But when the National Museum of African American History and Culture — a grand Smithsonian cathedral celebrating 400 years of black struggle and achievement — opened last month in Washington, Thomas was barely a footnote. Within an exhibit about race-dominated social, economic, political and cultural moments during the past four decades, Thomas is mentioned only in a passing reference about Anita Hill testifying against him for sexual harassment during his confirmation hearings.

Several conservative websites want to change that. Last week, StandUnited addressed a petition to museum director Lonnie Bunch III asking him not to "overlook African-American leaders like Justice Clarence Thomas."

Linda St. Thomas, chief spokesperson for the Smithsonian Institution, said "there are many compelling personal stories about African-Americans who have defied the odds and forged remarkable careers. Justice Thomas is one of them. We recognize that we cannot tell every story in our inaugural exhibitions, and we will continue to evolve and change over time as we interpret the African-American experience."

St. Thomas said there are 3,000 items, including photos, on display in the museum. That’s a fraction of the thousands of items the museum has collected.

Clarence Thomas’ supporters aren’t having it.

Calling the conservative justice a “uniquely American story, in all its complexity,” the petition, which thus far has about 7,300 signatures, argues that Thomas has been shunned by the liberal black community because he has spoken out against affirmative action.

“Curators at the museum singled out Thomas due to his unique views on race and his conservative thought that the federal government is the greatest threat to our individual liberties,” the petition states. “The museum highlights people of less noble endeavors, and it is unfathomable to think the curators were not open-minded enough to include all historically significant African-Americans, no matter their political beliefs.”

“It really took off,” said Angela Morabito, an Atlanta-native who now lives in Washington, where she works for StandUnited. “You see people who are writing in and saying they want to see Clarence Thomas represented for what he presented to Constitutional thought.”

For all that Thomas has achieved, he remains one of the most polarizing figures in American history.

"I don't agree with him and I don't understand where he comes from. But he is clearly the product of the black experience in America," said former congressman, U.N. ambassador, Atlanta mayor and civil rights leader Andrew Young, who has yet to visit the museum. "I have never given up on him and he belongs there."

Born in Savannah, Thomas breezed through Yale Law School and by 1982 was appointed chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). In 1991, President George H.W. Bush nominated him for the Supreme Court to fill the seat once held by Marshall, who had retired. Marshall, a legendary civil rights figure, died in 1993.

The usually mundane confirmation hearings introduced Thomas to America in ways that were unprecedented for a potential justice. Anita Hill, an attorney who had once worked for Thomas, testified that he sexually harassed her at the EEOC, an allegation that launched a national debate.

Thomas himself called the confirmation process a “high-tech lynching for uppity blacks who in any way deign to think for themselves, to do for themselves, to have different ideas. And it is a message that unless you kowtow to an old order, this is what will happen to you. You will be lynched, destroyed, caricatured by a committee of the U.S. Senate rather than hung from a tree.”

He was ultimately confirmed, but his legacy among African-Americans remained tarnished — primarily because of his legal record, particularly his opposition to race-based affirmative action plans.

Samuel F. Mosteller, the Georgia president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said Thomas being the second black U.S. Supreme Court justice is not reason enough to merit his inclusion in the new Smithsonian museum.

“Clarence Thomas is a mediocre jurist at best,” Mosteller said. “All he has done is pander to the far right and whatever Antonin Scalia told him to do. He has not been fair and is a one-trick pony.”

But others have more nuanced views on Thomas. William Boone, a political scientist at Clark Atlanta University, argues that while Thomas’ views run counter to those of mainstream African-Americans, it would be dangerous to try to rewrite him out of history.

Janice Mathis, executive director of the National Council of Negro Women, agrees.

“He was not a worthy successor to Thurgood Marshall, but he is part of history,” Mathis said. “I don’t believe in revisionist history. History speaks for itself. He stands for the principals that not all blacks think alike. His thinking is far outside of what most African-Americans and Americans believe, but he belongs there as much as the Mothership belongs there.”

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