Born on December 25, 1961, to Richard and Betty Graham, the story of the life of Lawrence Otis Graham began rooted in the segregated
Jim Crow era of the south, where his
Memphis, Tennessee-born parents were raised and his grandparents owned and operated a trucking company. At five-years-old, Larry's parents engaged a bold barrier-breaking mission purposed to find and acquire a residential family home in a then-mostly Caucasian-filled suburban
Westchester County New York City neighborhood. "We were the only black family in our all-white upper middle-class
White Plains neighborhood in the 1960s and 1970s."Those were the grounds that influenced Lawrence Otis Graham's lifetime efforts dedicated to the pursuit of racial equality and justice. While his father employed in New York in the field of real estate management, Graham and his older brother were raised in
Mount Vernon, New York, and later nearby White Plains, New York. There, Graham attended
White Plains High School, where he wrote for the school newspaper, The Orange. Graham went on to attend
Princeton University, where he majored in English, was a member of
Whig-Clio and the Carl A. Fields Center (formally, the Third World Center), and was recognized as an active in social-justice issues. After graduating Princeton with a Bachelor of Arts in English, Graham went on to earn a Juris Doctor degree from
Harvard Law School in 1988. Afterwards, he practiced as a corporate lawyer in Manhattan. ==Career==