In 1933, Lawson founded the New Negro Alliance (NNA) in Washington, D.C., along with
John A. Davis Sr. and
M. Franklin Thorne, to challenge
white-owned businesses in
black neighborhoods that would not hire black employees. The NNA instituted a ''Don't Buy Where You Can't Work
campaign, considered radical at the time, and organized or threatened boycotts against white-owned businesses that did not hire blacks. In response, some businesses arranged for an injunction to stop the picketing. Lawson, the lead attorney, with assistance by Thurgood Marshall, fought back – all the way to the United States Supreme Court in New Negro Alliance v. Sanitary Grocery Co.'' (1938). The court ruled that the organization and residents had a right to boycott. This became a
landmark case in the
struggle by African Americans against
discriminatory hiring practices. Don't Buy Where You Can't Work groups multiplied throughout the nation. The NNA estimated that by 1940, the group had secured 5,106 jobs for blacks because businesses could not afford to lose sales of black customers during the
Great Depression. In 1934, Lawson encouraged
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) special counsel
Charles Houston to authorize Thurgood Marshall to file the case of
Murray v. Maryland (1935) to challenge the state law requiring segregation in the
University of Maryland School of Law. Marshall won the case, and
Donald Murray was admitted to the university's law school. Lawson was part of the legal team that won
Henderson v. Southern Railway Company (1950), challenging the
Interstate Commerce Commission's approval of railroad racial segregation practices. The
lawsuit resulted in the abolition of segregation in railroad
dining cars. The fraternity sponsors an annual Belford V. Lawson Oratorical Contest. Collegiate members compete in
oratorical skills at the chapter level, with the winner competing at the state, regional, and general conventions. The fraternity says "the purpose of the Belford V. Lawson Oratorical Contest is to identify problems or special topics of interest within society and determine how the problem or topic relates to the goals and objectives of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Incorporated." In 1973, Lawson was elected president of YMCA of the USA. He continued to be active in law and civic activities but reduced his activities in later years. He died in Washington, D.C., in 1985, after having battled age-related dementia and stomach cancer. ==References==