NASHVILLE, TN — The Francis S. Guess Bridge to Equality Award honors the memory of civil rights trailblazer and civic leader Francis S. Guess and recognizes those who spur innovation leading to equality.
The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee is proud to present the third annual Francis S. Guess Bridge to Equality Award to retired U.S. District Court Judge Thomas A. Wiseman Jr. and State Court of Appeals Judge Richard H. Dinkins at the Francis S. Guess Bridge to Equality Award Luncheon. The luncheon is set for 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Friday, May 11 at the Music City Center’s Davidson Ballroom.
“Our goal for this event is to recognize civic leaders who have helped this community survive and prosper through the building of bridges and the hard work of building community from disparity,” said Ellen Lehman, president of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee. “When we considered the most important bridges that have been built — without the use of cranes or welding masks — we naturally thought of the desegregation of Nashville Metro Public Schools.”
Lehman continued, “Although this journey toward desegregation began with bringing the white and African American communities together and introducing Nashvillians to each other, its lasting consequence has been much larger as is obvious in the diversity now represented in our schools.”
Attorneys Z. Alexander Looby and Avon Williams Jr. filed the first school desegregation case, Kelley v Nashville Board of Education, in Nashville in 1956. It was just two years after the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark 9-0 decision in the Brown v Board of Education case, in which the court declared state laws establishing separate public schools for black and white students to be unconstitutional.
Nashville’s ongoing desegregation efforts and court battles continued for more than 40 years — one of the longest-running cases in history — with the case finally settled and the school system declared unitary in 1998.
“But for the work of these honorees, not only would whites and African Americans not know each other well, but neither would the Kurds, Somalis, Hispanics, Muslims, Asians and others,” Lehman said. “The implications of desegregation have made this community stronger, more vibrant, and welcoming.”
Tickets to the Bridge to Equality Fund luncheon are available at $80 for individuals and $800 per table at cfmt.org
About Judge Thomas A. Wiseman
Thomas A. Wiseman Jr. helped Middle Tennessee navigate the long legal journey to progress on race, health care for the poor, the war on drugs and served as presiding judge in the long-running Metro schools desegregation case. He retired in 2013 as a U.S. District Court judge after 35 years of service.
Wiseman, 87, earned a bachelor’s degree in 1952 from Vanderbilt University and a law degree from Vanderbilt School of Law in 1954. After a two-year stint in the U.S. Army and several years in private practice as an attorney in his hometown of Tullahoma and later Winchester, he served as a member of the state House of Representatives from 1964-68 and as treasurer of the State of Tennessee from 1971-74.
In 1978, President Jimmy Carter nominated Wiseman to a seat in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee. Wiseman was soon involved in hearings for the ongoing schools desegregation case.
Wiseman’s other judicial career highlights included presiding over the end of a federal lawsuit to dismantle the dual system — one for blacks and one for whites — in the state’s higher education system, as well as the end of a 14-year-old lawsuit against the state of Tennessee over health care provided to children around the state.
Wiseman has been a long-time adjunct faculty member at Vanderbilt School of Law and is a recipient of its Distinguished Service Award.
About Judge Richard Dinkins
Richard H. Dinkins, in successfully representing the plaintiffs in Nashville’s school desegregation case, greatly influenced the well-being of schoolchildren of all races, creeds and color. He has served as a judge in the Tennessee Court of Appeals since 2008.
Born in Nashville and raised in Memphis, Dinkins, 65, earned a bachelor’s degree from Denison University and graduated from the Vanderbilt University School of Law in 1977. He first became in involved in the consolidated desegregation case while a third-year law student clerking for Avon Williams Jr.
An alumnus of Leadership Nashville, Dinkins also serves as an adjunct professor at Lipscomb University’s Institute for Law, Justice and Society. His civic work has included serving on the boards of LEAD Public Schools, Oasis Center, Tennessee Alliances for Legal Services, and Tennessee Jazz and Blues Society.
Awards include the 2018 John C. Tune Public Service Award from the Nashville Bar Association and the 2013 Human Relations Award from Community Nashville.
In 2016, civic leader Ben R. Rechter was awarded the inaugural Francis S. Guess Bridge to Equality Award, while U.S. District Court Judge Waverly Crenshaw received the second award in 2017.