William Lamson Document Collection
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William D. Lamson William D. Lamson was a demographer and cartographer and served as an expert witness for the NAACP, ACLU, United States Department of Justice, NAACP Legal Defense Fund and numerous private plaintiffs. He was an architect/planner and demographic analyst for court cases dealing with school desegregation, voting rights, housing discrimination, and judicial redistricting. He performed three functions for his clients: director and coordinator of factual research; principal factual analyst; and evidence presentation consultant. In those capacities he provided factual and expert testimony, and graphic representations of the research results (most notably with large maps with his illustrations presented in court rooms). William D. Lamson was a native of Detroit, Michigan (b. September 14, 1941) and was living in Jackson, Mississippi at the time of his death (February 8, 1995). While in Michigan, he attended the University of Michigan, the Detroit Institute of Technology, and the Lawrence Institute of Technology, and was also a founding faculty member of Wayne County Community College. He was also a veteran of the United States Army. Lamson worked on over 20 legal cases and served as an expert on voting rights, housing discrimination, and demographics in more than 10 other cases.
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William Lamson Series I.D, Box 1, Folder 32: Topeka Closings Pre-trial documents for Brown v. Topeka Board of Education, Brown III. A copy of “Response of Unified School District No. 501 to Plaintiff-Intervenors’ Interrogatory No. 40 of the Fourth Set and Third Request to Produce” dated December 5, 1984. Handwritten analysis by William Lamson: Junior High and Senior High School closings and the racial effects.