By The Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) โ€” Current and former Virginia elected leaders speaking at this weekendโ€™s service for the first Black mayor of Richmond recalled Henry L. Marsh IIIโ€™s trailblazing career and his lifetime commitment to civil rights.

Hundreds of people attended the Feb. 1 funeral at a Richmond-area church for Marsh, who died Jan. 23 at age 91, according to the Manning Funeral Home. Richmond was the former capital of the Confederacy.

Sen. Henry L. Marsh, III, D-Richmond, smiles in Richmond, Va., just before resigning from the state Senate, ending a 22-year career in the upper chamber, April 23, 2014. (Bob Brown/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP)

Marsh, who was born in Richmond and educated in segregated schools, devoted much of his work to dismantling racial segregation in schools, government and the workplace.

โ€œHe saw injustice and he did something about it,โ€ U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., told mourners, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported.

Marsh was elected to the Richmond City Council in 1966. Four years later, he became vice mayor. In 1977, the city council made him the cityโ€™s first Black mayor. At the time, the mayor and vice mayor were appointed by the city council.

After a single term as mayor, Marsh was elected to the Virginia state Senate in 1991 and represented the 16th District for 22 years before resigning.

Marshโ€™s focus on dismantling segregation was honored in 2020 when Richmondโ€™s school board renamed the elementary school he attended for him.

โ€œHe taught us it is one thing to have power, and it is another to use it,โ€ Dwight Jones, Richmondโ€™s mayor from 2009 to 2016, said on Feb. 1. โ€œHe changed the trajectory of the city.โ€

During his eulogy, U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., himself a former Richmond mayor and civil rights lawyer, recounted Marshโ€™s mentorship.

As a student at Virginia Union University, Marsh testified before state lawmakers to oppose Virginia maintaining separate public schools for Blacks and whites.

Marsh then attended Howard University law school, sharing a room with L. Douglas Wilder, who followed Marsh as Richmondโ€™s mayor and later became the nationโ€™s first Black governor.

Marsh joined with Samuel L. Tucker to form a law firm in 1961. Together, they won legal battles involving Philip Morris and seniority for Black employees, and the establishment of single-member districts in both chambers of the General Assembly.

Scott said Feb. 1 that Marsh was lead attorney on nearly 50 lawsuits to end segregated schools in Virginia.

Marsh was later appointed by then-Gov. Terry McAuliffe as commissioner of the stateโ€™s Department of Alcohol Beverage Control.

Marshโ€™s wife, Diane, a dentist, died in 2020. His survivors include three children, six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.