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Name Historical significance Violette Neatley Anderson (1882–1937) [1]: First African-American woman to practice law before the United States Supreme Court on January 29, 1926
The National Bar Association (NBA) was founded in 1925 and is the nation's oldest and largest national network of predominantly African-American attorneys and judges. It represents the interests of approximately 67,000 lawyers, judges, law professors, and law students.
Clarence Cuthpert, Jr.: [74] First African American male to serve as a State Court Judge in Rockdale County, Georgia (2021) Robert L. Moore: [75] First African American male to serve as the Assistant District Attorney in Thomasville, Georgia [Thomas County, Georgia] Larry Mims: [76] First African American male lawyer and judge in Tift County ...
The Vault.com Guide to America's Top 50 Law Firms (1998) Oller, John. White Shoe: How a New Breed of Wall Street Lawyers Changed Big Business and the American Century (2019), excerpt; Power, Roscoe. "Legal Profession in America," 19 Notre Dame Law Review (1944) pp 334+ online; Wald, Eli, "The rise and fall of the WASP and Jewish law firms."
First male lawyer of Czech descent: Augustin Haidusek (c. 1870) [12] First African American male lawyer called to the English Bar: [13] Thomas Morris Chester (1870) First deaf male lawyer: Joseph G. Parkinson (1880) [14] First Turkish American male lawyer: James Ben Ali Haggin (c. 1880s) [15] First Chinese male lawyer: Hong Yen Chang (1888) [16]
The annual meetings attracted around 50 lawyers each year. [9] The membership was dominated by lawyers from the American South. [8] The attendance of attorney Lutie Lytle at the NNBA's 1913 meeting made history, as she became the first African-American woman to participate in a national bar association. [10]
Lawyers for three police officers charged in the death of Manny Ellis on Thursday challenged a forensic video analyst's interpretation of videos shot by witnesses that show the Black man's fatal ...
Jane Matilda Bolin was born on April 11, 1908, in Poughkeepsie, New York.She was an only child. Her father, Gaius C. Bolin, was a lawyer and the first black person to graduate from Williams College, [2] and her mother, Matilda Ingram Emery, [3] was an immigrant from the British Isles who died when Bolin was 8 years old.