Curtis L. Lawson (1935–2008) was an American state politician from Tulsa, Oklahoma.
In 1964 he was one of the first three African Americans elected to the Oklahoma House of Representatives since A. C. Hamlin in 1908.
[1][2] Lawson represented a district in Tulsa from 1965 to 1969.
[4] After his legislative service he encountered legal difficulties, including serving a prison term for embezzlement (for which he was later pardoned).
[5][6][7] He is featured in the Oklahoma History Center's One Man One Vote exhibit.