A vision of equality for the 21st century

On June 21, 1963, President John F. Kennedy and Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy met with 250 leading American lawyers in the East Room of the White House to discuss the role lawyers could and should play in the deepening civil rights crisis. The nation recently had been shaken by television and news accounts of police-led violence against peaceful demonstrations led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and by the spectacle of U.S. Army intervention to enforce court orders requiring the University of Alabama to admit Black students against a defiant Governor Wallace. President Kennedy noted the special role that lawyers have played in the creation and maintenance of our constitutional system of government and the rule of law. The President and Attorney General made a special appeal to the lawyers to mobilize the voice and work of the legal profession to support the struggle for civil rights in the nation. From this meeting, the national Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law was formed.

Boston must become a testing ground for the ideals of freedom.” — Martin Luther King, Jr. (1965)

The Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law of the Boston Bar Association was formed in 1968 in the midst of riots in Northern cities, the assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and the findings of the Kerner Commission (concluding that the nation was “moving toward two societies, one black, one white – separate and unequal”). Funded with a grant from the Ford Foundation and contributions from major Boston law firms, we became the first of eight independent affiliates of the national Lawyers’ Committee. President Kennedy’s vision of the legal profession mobilizing its tremendous resources to support peaceful progress in civil rights came home to his birthplace.

In 1973, we became the first pro bono project of the Boston Bar Association. We are the only Lawyers’ Committee in the country affiliated with a major bar association. Although the organization is now separately incorporated with its own non-profit 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status, it maintains strong ties with the Boston Bar Association.

In 2018, we celebrated our 50th anniversary and rebranded as Lawyers for Civil Rights (LCR). The U.S. Congress marked this landmark occasion with a Congressional Resolution honoring our organization and 50 years of impactful work. The Boston City Council also issued a resolution honoring LCR and declared October 18, 2018 as Civil Rights and Economic Justice Day in Boston.

In 2024, MacKenzie Scott announced a $2 million gift to LCR, as part of the Yield Giving Open Call. In a pool of 6,353 applicants across the country, as judged by peer and external evaluators, LCR was among the highest-ranking organizations nationally. Click here to learn more about this transformative gift.


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