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L. Douglas Wilder

Lawrence Douglas Wilder was born to Robert and Beulah Wilder on January 17, 1931, in Richmond, Virginia. The grandson of slaves, he was named after abolitionist-orator Frederick Douglas and poet Paul Lawrence Dunbar. He grew up in the Church Hill district of the city along with six sisters and a brother.

In 1951,Lawrence Douglas Wilder graduated from Virginia Union University with a Bachelor of Science degree in chemistry, whereupon he served in the U. S. Army. While serving in Korea, he was awarded the Bronze Star for heroism in ground combat for rescuing GIs and for capturing enemy troops.

Upon his return to Virginia, Wilder worked as a chemist for the state medical examiner’s office. When he decided to study law, he had to leave the state because Virginia barred blacks from attending its law schools at the time. In 1959, he graduated from Howard University School of Law in Washington, D. C. with a Juris Doctor degree. After passing the bar, he established the law firm which came to be known as Wilder, Gregory and Associates – one of the few minority-owned businesses in Virginia – and went on to develop a reputation as a top criminal trial lawyer.

In 1969, Wilder entered politics, running in a special at-large election for a vacated state Senate seat in Richmond. By winning that election, he became the first African-American state senator in Virginia since Reconstruction. During his five terms in the Virginia Senate, he chaired several committees, including the Democratic Steering Committee. In addition, he successfully sponsored Virginia’s first drug paraphernalia law and the compulsory school attendance law. For eight years he persisted until Virginia finally declared a holiday for Martin Luther King, Jr. Wilder made history again in 1985 by being elected Virginia’s first African-American Lieutenant Governor.

A milestone was achieved on January 13, 1990, when Virginia’s 66th Governor, Lawrence Douglas Wilder, was sworn in as the first elected African-American Governor in U. S. History. What made the event all the more meaningful was his election in Virginia, the former capital of the Confederacy. During Governor Wilder’s term in office, his administration achieved numerous successes, including nationally recognized leadership in fiscal management. In fact, Virginia was ranked by Financial World magazine as the nation’s best-managed state two years in a row.