found: African American National Biography, accessed June 16, 2015, via Oxford African American Studies Center database:(Anderson, Charles W., Jr.; lawyer, diplomat, state legislator; born 26 May 1907 in Louisville, Kentucky, United States; an LLB, Howard University's law school, Washington, D.C. (1930); returned to Kentucky and passed the bar (1932); worked as a partner in his own firm of Anderson, Thomas & Walker; won a seat in the Kentucky House of Representatives as a Republican; sponsored a bill that would repeal Kentucky's law mandating hanging for the crime of rape; one of his bills mandated that rural school districts offer secondary education to their black students; sponsored legislation entitling black students to $5,000 each if they were forced to enroll in a graduate degree program outside of Kentucky because one did not exist for them in the state; resigned his seat in the Kentucky House of Representatives (1946); accepted a position as Jefferson County's first black commonwealth assistant attorney (until 1952); Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed him as an alternate U.S. delegate to the General Assembly of the United Nations (1959); died 14 June 1960 in Shelby County, Kentucky, United States)