(seated, bottom center), and
A. T. Walden (seated, bottom right), with 3 unknown standing men, 1950. As a young man, Mitchell worked for the
Baltimore Afro-American newspaper. He wrote articles about the infamous
Scottsboro case in 1931. He also covered the
lynching of Matthew Williams on December 4, 1931, in
Salisbury on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. The young black man was accused of killing his white employer. Mitchell had not seen the lynching but arrived as the white mob set Williams' body on fire and dragged it through the black neighborhood of the city. White journalist
H.L. Mencken also covered these events for
The Baltimore Sun, attacking newspapers on the Eastern Shore for contributing to a racist atmosphere and being too cowardly to cover the lynching. After Mitchell returned home and recounted the events, his brother
Parren vowed to one day take up the fight for racial justice. In the 1940s, Mitchell began working as staff to the
Fair Employment Practices Committee, established by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt by
Executive Order 8802 in 1941, to oversee ending discrimination in defense industries with contracts with the federal government, and provide fair employment opportunities to all Americans. From 1942 to 1946, he acted as "principal fair practice examiner, associate director of field operations, and director of field operations" in the Washington, D.C., area. In 1952
Walter White, president of the NAACP, set up the
Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, a coalition of civil rights, civic, labor, religious, and fraternal organizations to manage political operations in Washington for civil rights.
Roy Wilkins, NAACP executive director, served as chairman of the LCCR, and Mitchell was appointed as legislative chairman. "He directed the strategy that resulted in the fulfillment of the goals of the modern civil rights movement." The
Civil Rights Act of 1957 was a step toward securing the constitutional rights of all citizens. Of note was the fact that during the passing of the act, segregationist senator
Strom Thurmond took it upon himself to stage an obstructively long speech known as a "
filibuster" to prevent it from passing. This was despite previously agreeing
not to do so.
Thurmond's filibuster, lasting 24 hours and 18 minutes, was the longest ever given
in the US Senate by a single person. Mitchell was present in the
Senate chamber gallery during the speech along with several hundred other people when it started at 8:54p.m.
EST and had the stamina to stay there during the early morning while the filibuster was still ongoing. By which time, almost everyone in the gallery had left except for Mitchell himself and Thurmond's wife Jean. Mitchell continued to serve as an NAACP lobbyist to Congress through the 1960s, as the civil rights movement reached new peaks in demonstrations and increasing national awareness through campaigns in the South. Mitchell helped secure passage of the era's critical civil rights legislation: the
Civil Rights Act of 1960, the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, the
Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the
Fair Housing Act (
Title VIII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1968). He was nicknamed "
the 101st U.S. Senator." Mitchell was a member on the Board of Regents at the
University of Maryland, College Park from 1982 to 1984. His papers and those of the NAACP Washington Bureau 1942–1978, are held at the
State University of New York (SUNY) College at
Old Westbury, New York. == Personal life ==