Hollowell, Foster & Herring, PC Law Firm Profile | BCGSearch.com

Hollowell, Foster & Herring, PC

3 Metro Rankings

About Hollowell, Foster & Herring, PC

Founder, the late Donald Lee Hollowell, was one of the most renowned civil rights attorneys in the United States. He served as counsel to such prominent figures as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Charlayne Hunter-Gault, Dr. Hamilton Holmes, and the Honorable Horace T. Ward.

Hollowell the Buffalo Soldier: Born in Wichita, Kan., on Dec. 19, 1917, Hollowell was told by his janitor father at age 18 that he had to quit school to help make ends meet. He went straight to Fort Leavenworth and enlisted in the Army's all-black 10th Cavalry, the regiment known as the Buffalo Soldiers in the Old West. During his six years in the Army, he earned his high school diploma and, in 1941, enrolled in all-black Lane College in Jackson, Tenn., where he became the starting quarterback on the football team. After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, Hollowell re-enlisted and rose to the rank of captain while serving in Europe. He returned to Lane after the war and earned an undergraduate degree. In 1951 he received his law degree from Loyola University in Chicago.

Hollowell the Civil Rights Attorney: In the 1950s and '60s, Hollowell served as one of the lead lawyers in the desegregation of Atlanta schools. He represented Martin Luther King Jr. in 1960 after the civil rights leader was sent to Reidsville Prison on a DeKalb County traffic charge. A year later, he was the attorney for Charlayne Hunter (later Hunter-Gault) and Hamilton Holmes Jr. as they integrated the University of Georgia. Hollowell's firm worked to desegregate Augusta's buses and Macon's schools and won a landmark case requiring Atlanta's Grady Memorial Hospital to admit black doctors and dentists to its staff. In a 2004 interview, former Fulton County Superior Court Judge Marvin Arrington said: "During the movement, in and around 1960 and 1961, when it was hot and heavy, he fought for civil rights, and he did it with a degree of professionalism. He was intelligent and a great advocate."

Hollowell the Mentor: As a prominent black attorney in Atlanta, Hollowell was a beacon and mentor to a host of young black attorneys, including Arrington, Vernon Jordan and former federal Judge Horace Ward. Jordan, who went on to become an adviser to Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton and to lead the National Urban League, started working for Hollowell the weekend after he graduated from law school. "I finished law school the first Friday in June 1960. The Monday morning after I graduated, I went to work for Donald Hollowell for $35 a week," Jordan said. "I was his law clerk and researcher, and I carried his briefcase and I was his right-hand man. He taught me how to be a lawyer, a leader, how to fight injustice. Whatever I have become in the years, I owe it to him in large measure." Hollowell the Regional Director of the EEOC: In 1966, Hollowell accepted an appointment from President Lyndon Johnson as the first Regional Director of the new Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which monitors workplace discrimination. Dr. Hollowell remained at the EEOC as a Regional Attorney until 1985 and was later considered a likely candidate for a federal or state judgeship, although no nomination ever came. In 1998, he became a special Fulton County State Court magistrate. "I had a great deal of respect for him, and my only regret is that he was never appointed to the bench," said former Atlanta Mayor Sam Massell. "Dr. Hollowell commanded respect, and that is what made the difference."

Hollowell the Parkway: In 1998, to mark his 81st birthday, the Department of Transportation renamed the blighted road originally named for Alabama Congressman John Bankhead. The DOT and members of the Bankhead Business Association figured the new name, Donald Lee Hollowell Parkway, was needed to go along with planned upgrades intended to boost the corridor's image, viability and safety. Hollowell, who had lived near the area for more than a half-century, was seen as the perfect choice: "I'm not a young man anymore and don't have the energy I once had when I was very active as a civil rights lawyer," Hollowell said at the time. "But I will try to do all I can and encourage others to help make this a better community."


HFH
Donald Lee Hollowell Memorial Water Park

Location: Center Hill Park, Atlanta, Georgia

A neighborhood park renovation for the City of Atlanta, the plaza includes a Memorial to civil rights lawyer and activist, Donald Lee Hollowell and an interactive fountain/water play area for children. The site is an inviting gathering place for residents of the surrounding neighborhoods, engaging visitors of all ages, and an integral part of community life.

Location and Practice Areas Wise Attorney Count:

Total Offices: 1

Total Attorneys: 2

Total Office Wise Attorneys:

Locations No. of Attorneys
Atlanta, 2

Total number of Attorneys in this Practice Area:

Practice Areas No. of Attorneys
Trusts and Estates 2

Practice Area Rankings by Region

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