Julian T. Pierce (died March 26, 1988) was a Lumbee Indian born in Moore County, North Carolina. [1]
At sixteen, Pierce graduated from Hawkeye High School. He attended the University of North Carolina at Pembroke in Pembroke, North Carolina on full scholarship and graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry. [1]
After graduation, he began working as a chemist for the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company in Newport News, Virginia, and later worked as a chemist in the Navy Shipyard in Norfolk, Virginia. There he developed an award-winning chemical process for decontamination of nuclear reactors. [1]
After several years, Pierce attended law school. He chose the North Carolina Central University School of Law. After graduation from NCCU, in 1976, he was offered a position with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington, D.C.. While working, Pierce attended Georgetown School of Law to earn his Master of Laws in Taxation. [1]
In 1978, he returned to North Carolina to become the first director of the Lumbee River Legal Services, a poverty law office in Pembroke. For ten years, Pierce worked at Lumbee River Legal Services to raise the standard of legal care for the poor citizens of Robeson County. He took part in merging the tri-school board system into a one-school board system in the county so that all children would receive equal educational funding. [1]
In 1987, Pierce, along with others petitioned the United States Department of the Interior for federal acknowledgment and entry to tribal rolls for the Lumbee. The petition was denied due to language in the Lumbee Act of 1956. The group then introduced a recognition bill, but it failed due to opposition from the Department of the Interior and from other recognized tribes. [1]
In 1988, the North Carolina General Assembly created a new Superior Court Judgeship in Robeson County. Joe Freeman Britt, the county's district attorney, announced his candidacy first. At the time. While Pierce did not have the popularity of Britt, many people knew him from his numerous community service roles such as when he was Chairman of the Lumbee Medical Clinic, on the board of directors of the North Carolina Legal Resource Center, or Vice-Chairman of the Robeson Health Care Corporation. [1]
Pierce resigned from his position as director of Lumbee River Legal Services to start a campaign to become the first Native American superior court judge in North Carolina. [1]
On March 26, 1988, Pierce's body was found in his home with shotgun wounds to his head, chest, and stomach were he had been murdered. In the aftermath, Britt was automatically declared the winner of the primary election. However, some reporters and campaign workers counted the votes and determined that Pierce actually won the vote posthumously, 10,787 to 8,231. [1]