Table of Contents
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Archives and Special Collections Finding Aids
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| Collection |
| Title: | The Justice George Lewis Ruffin Society records |
| Dates: | n.d., 1848-1853, 1885-1893, 1963-2005 (bulk 1984-2005) |
| Call Number: | M124 |
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Historical Note
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The George Lewis Ruffin Society, named after the first African American in Massachusetts to earn a law degree and serve as a judge, was started in 1984 in response to dwindling numbers of minority officers within the Boston Police Department. In 1984 the Boston Police Department employed only one minority superior police officer. The founding members of the Society joined forces with Northeastern University's College of Criminal Justice in hopes of "creating a greater understanding between the minority community and criminal justice profession, as well as to promote and encourage the advancement of minorities in the field of criminal justice" (Online Exhibit, "Long Road to Justice," Massachusetts Historical Society, c. 2000). The membership of the Society was mainly comprised of middle and senior criminal justice managers seeking to create more opportunities for advancement and professional development in the lower ranks of the profession.
In 1985, under the leadership of its new president, Superintendent of the Boston Police Department Joseph C. Carter, the Society held a public exhibit at the Social Law Library in Boston of personal papers and documents belonging to Justice George Lewis Ruffin. Under Carter's leadership, the Ruffin Society also sponsored the first preparation course for minority officers taking the promotion exam given by the Boston Police Department. In 1986, 15 minority sergeants were sworn in as superior officers, and all but one of this group had taken the Ruffin Society's preparation course. Included within this group were the first Asian, Hispanic, and African American female sergeants in the history of the Boston Police Department. The Ruffin Society also sponsored a conference in 1986 for African American leaders in the Roxbury and Dorchester communities to address the new "Stop and Frisk" laws. The "Stop and Frisk" laws gave patrolling policemen the legal power to stop and frisk any passerby the officer thought suspicious. Many in Roxbury and Dorchester in particular felt that these laws were used unfairly to harass young men from their communities and the Ruffin-sponsored conference was held to help local law enforcement and civilians understand the implications of the "Stop and Frisk" laws. The Society, through a 1987 grant from the Hyams Foundation and the Boston Foundation, established the Ruffin Fellows Programs which offered tuition-free admission to the Master of Science in Criminal Justice Program at Northeastern University, room and board, and a stipend to exceptional college students hoping to pursue careers in the criminal justice field. In 1992, the Society held its first convocation to discuss how minority communities can deal more effectively with crime. The convocation would go on to become an annual event, examining topics such as the emerging role of genetics in the criminal justice field, controlling crime, the O.J. Simpson trial, domestic violence, the African experience in the Massachusetts courts, the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act (2000), and sexual abuse among children in minority communities.
In 1999, the Society began developing the "Long Road to Justice" exhibit, with the help of Museum Design Associates. The "Long Road to Justice" was designed to be a traveling exhibit detailing the history of African Americans in the Massachusetts court system. The exhibit was completed in 2000 and opened at the Edward W. Brooke Courthouse in Boston. The Society continues to sponsor annual Convocations and Promotional Exam Prep Courses in addition to maintaining the "Long Road to Justice" exhibit. |
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| Chronology |
| 1984 | George Lewis Ruffin Society is founded. |
| 1984 | Founding members of the Ruffin Society meet with Northeastern University's Dean Norman Rosenblatt and Associate Dean Robert Croatti to establish an alliance between the University and the Ruffin Society. |
| 1985 | Ruffin Society is incorporated as a non-profit organization; Joseph C. Carter, Superintendent of the Boston Police Department is elected to be the first president; Ruffin Society sponsors first preparation course for the Boston Police Department's promotional examination. |
| 1987 | Ruffin Society establishes the Ruffin Fellows Program for minority students looking to pursue advanced degrees in criminal justice. |
| 1992 | Ruffin Society sponsors first statewide Convocation of minority criminal justice professionals. Over 600 people attend the event at Northeastern University to discuss how minority communities can better deal with crime. Convocations become an annual event. |
| 2000 | Ruffin Society sponsors the "Long Road to Justice," a traveling exhibit on the African American struggle for equality in Massachusetts, which opens on September 28 at the Edward W. Brooke Courthouse in Boston. |
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| Bibliography |
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"The Justice George Lewis Ruffin Society, 2004," M124, Box 1, Folder 78
"The Justice George Lewis Ruffin Society: An Oral History, n.d." M124, Box 1, Folder 79
"Mission Statements, 2001," M124, Box 1, Folder 60
Online Exhibit, "Long Road to Justice," Massachusetts Historical Society, c. 2000 |
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