Louis Arthur Grimes

Louis Arthur Grimes
10th Chief Justice of Liberia
In office
1933–1948
Nominated by Edwin Barclay
Preceded by F. E. R. Johnson
Succeeded by A. Dash Wilson
Personal details
Born 1883
Died 1948
Monrovia, Liberia

Louis Arthur Grimes (1883 – 1948) served as the 10th Chief Justice of Liberia and is considered one of the most important jurists in the history of Liberia. He was appointed Attorney General by President Charles D. B. King and served in this position from 1922 to 1932 when he was appointed Secretary of State by President Edwin Barclay. He served in this position from 1932 to 1933.[1] Secretary Grimes was preceded by Edwin Barclay and replaced by Clarence Lorenzo Simpson.

Perhaps Grimes' most significant accomplishment as Secretary of State was his successful defense of Liberia at the League of Nations when it was threatened with loss of its sovereignty as a result of charges that the country was participating in state sanctioned slave trading.[2] In 1933 he was appointed Chief Justice a position he served in until his death in 1948.[3] The Louis Arthur Grimes School of Law at the University of Liberia is named for him. He was a 1905 graduate of Liberia College.

Justice Grimes' legacy was continued by his children, including Henry W. Grimes who was a pioneer in telecommunications in Liberia, Joseph Rudolph Grimes, the longest serving Secretary of State in Liberia and a primary author of the charter for the Organization of African Unity (OAU), and Dr. Mary Antoinette Brown-Sherman, the first woman on the African continent to be the President of a major university.

References

  1. Sherman 2005, p. 29
  2. Sherman 2005, p. 29
  3. Sherman 2005, p .29
Legal offices
Preceded by
F. E. R. Johnson
Chief Justice of Liberia
1933 – 1948
Succeeded by
A. Dash Wilson

Sherman, Mary Antoinette Brown (2005). Jellemoh, The New World African Press.


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