The Indiana Supreme Court made
“legal history” on June 14, 1893, when they ruled that Antoinette Dakin Leach could
practice law in the state. State law at the time dictated that all those
wishing to take the bar exam be “resident voters”. Leach was not registered to
vote--no woman at that time could legally vote in an election. That was not to
come until 1920.
Mike McCormick, who writes a
column entitled “Historical Perspectives” for the Terre Haute Tribune-Star,
noted in a 2008 work headlined “Bessie Eaglesfield first female lawyer in state” that 18 years prior to
Leach being allowed to practice law, “Elizabeth Jane ‘Bessie’ Eaglesford was
practicing law in Terre Haute”.
Indiana Tech’s new law school has provided information on this facet of
history for our blog not only from McCormick’s column but also from 1990’s “A Tribute to the
Nation's First Women Law Students” by Karen Tokarz, Washington University Law Review, Volume 68, Issue 1.
Bessie
Eaglesford was 22 when Terre Haute attorney William Mack filed a motion on
September 8, 1875 to admit her to the bar. Vigo Circuit Court Judge Chambers Y.
Patterson found that she was “of good moral character, a voter and a
resident of this state, and the Court, being advised, so admits said Bessie
Eaglesfield.”
Three
years prior, the United States Supreme Court had ruled against an Illinois
woman who was seeking admission to the bar on the same grounds as Eaglesford.
According to McCormick, “The milestone reveals the community’s progressive
attitude as well as the principals, all conspicuous in state and local
history.”
Eaglesfield
studied law with Mack between studies at the University of Michigan, graduating
in 1876—after she was admitted to the bar. In 1878, she was the first woman to
be awarded a law degree from Michigan.
After
marriage and the birth of her son, she operated a “fancy goods shop”, practiced
law and piloted fruit packets on Lake Michigan. She died on June 24, 1940, just
a few days shy of her 87th birthday.
Said
McCormick, “A pilot on the Great lakes and one of the first 15 female lawyers
in America, Eaglesfield was a trailblazer in two disciplines. Her pioneer
experiences in the courts and on the waters deserve penetrating study.
“She
cleared the path for women in Indiana to practice law. Antoinette Leach of
Sullivan converted that passage into a concrete highway 18 years later.”
When Tokarz wrote her piece,
the law department at Washington University in St. Louis was celebrating the
120th anniversary of the admission of Lemma Barkeloo and Phoebe
Wilson Couzins to the law department. They were the first women admitted to the
law school and are also believed to be the first women law students in the
United States.
“Lemma Barkeloo and Phoebe
Wilson Couzins were women of remarkable vision and conviction. In 1869, neither
had known another woman law student or lawyer. Yet, each dreamed of attaining a
legal education and entering the legal profession. Lacking role models or
mentors, they were driven by an
internal sense of entitlement and equality. Barkeloo became Missouri's first
woman lawyer and the first woman in the United States to try a case in court.
Couzins was the state's first woman law graduate and the country's first woman
U.S. marshal. Each made historic contributions to the advancement of women in
the legal profession and in the law.”
Barkeloo was born in Brooklyn NY
in 1840. With the ability to sing well in several foreign languages and coming
from a wealthy family, she studied music with the best. But upon inheriting a
large sum of money, she turned to the law. She applied to Harvard and Columbia
Law Schools in 1868, but was refused admission.
“She then sought acceptance from
schools in the ‘West.’ She petitioned Dean Henry Hitchcock and the faculty of
Washington University's law department, and received permission to join the
1869 entering class.”
Barkeloo chose not to complete
law school and was denied in her petition to obtain an early degree. But she
took and passed the Missouri bar exam in 1870, “becoming Missouri's first, and
the country's second, woman lawyer. Barkeloo was preceded in her landmark accomplishment
by Arabella
"Belle" Mansfield, who was admitted to the Iowa bar in June 1869. As was typical of that
era, Mansfield had not attended law school prior to her admittance to the bar.”
Barkeloo became the first female
lawyer in America to try a case in court. She fell ill soon after beginning her
law practice and died of typhoid fever on September 11, 1870, just six months
after her law practice opened.
Phoebe Wilson Couzins was born
in St. Louis within a year of Lemma Barkeloo. Her family was prominent in local
politics and she became known in her hometown for her work in the suffragist
movement. In 1868, she asked to be admitted to the law school at Washington
University, which became the first law school in the country to accept
qualified applicants regardless of gender.
By contrast “Columbia University
did not admit women law students until 1929,
Harvard not until 1950.”
Couzins completed the two-year
degree program and was the first woman to graduate from Washington University’s
law school and only the third woman to graduate from law school in the United
States. She set up her law practice in downtown St. Louis, passed the Missouri
bar and was admitted in 1871, giving her “the distinction of being only the
third or fourth woman licensed to practice law in the United States…” She was
the second woman admitted to the bar in Missouri and the first in Arkansas. She
was admitted to the Utah bar in 1872 along with Georgia Snow, the daughter of
Utah’s Attorney General. She also was admitted to the Kansas and Dakota
Territory bar associations.
But women’s suffrage was
Couzin’s main concern. After serving on the Western Sanitary Commission during
the Civil War, she came to the belief that there would be fewer wars if women
could vote. She helped to found the National Woman Suffrage Association with
Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. She became known for her oratory
on the “issues of suffrage, temperance, and women’s rights”. She appeared
before the Missouri legislature in 1869, “advocating passage of legislation
granting women the right to vote”. The proposal was defeated by a vote of 89 to
5.
However, this Missouri
appearance led to more in the west and her influence spread.
“She spoke on the platform at
the Democratic National Convention on June 27, 1876, advocating women's rights. In 1882, President Chester Arthur
considered Couzins for a seat on the Utah Territory governing commission. She
failed to get that appointment, but in September 1887, President Grover Cleveland
appointed her to succeed her father as U.S. marshal for the Eastern District of
Missouri. Couzins was the first woman in the country appointed to serve as a U.S. marshal, an appointment that drew
public criticism. Couzins responded to this criticism in a letter to the editor
of the Missouri Republican, stating that ‘a woman typifies justice and ... symbolizes law; therefore it does
not appear so funny to empower women to execute the office of U.S. Marshal.’”
Couzins moved to Washington,
D.C. in 1889 and tried her hand at writing, a venture that failed. She had very
little income after her father’s death and accepted a position as the secretary
of the World’s Columbian Exposition in 1890. But she came into conflict with
board chair Bertha H. Palmer and was removed from the board. She sued but lost.
“In the 1890s, Couzins
inexplicably retreated from some of her earlier views on women's rights and the
suffrage and temperance movements. She became a lobbyist for the liquor
industry. Further, she asserted that ‘the great work for the majority of women
is motherhood,’ and no longer advocated women working outside the home. In the
most dramatic turnabout, she argued that ‘endow[ing women] with the ballot would
be a mistake.’ One author suggests that Couzins, struggling to reconcile the
roles of women as mothers and political activists, became ‘frustrated by the lethargy of the feminist
movement after 1880.’”
Couzins began to spiral into a
state of “serious mental and physical deterioration”. She “grew embittered at
the new, young, wealthy members of the suffrage movement.” Couzins became
confined to a wheel chair and sought financial assistance from anyone who would
listen. Her frustration with progressive movements and Washington University
grew and in 1907 “she demanded that she be allowed to speak at the
thirty-eighth anniversary of the law school's commencement exercises”. Her
request was denied.
“In 1912, she vehemently requested the privilege of sitting on the platform at the commencement, marking Washington University's sixtieth anniversary. Although she was permitted to attend the graduation ceremony, she was not allowed a place on the platform. Couzins' otherwise brilliant career had taken a sad and ironic twist. Friends and those who knew her history were surprised and saddened by the shift in Couzins' views. The woman who once had been described as ‘one of the most widely known women in America’ and affectionately referred to as ‘Colonel Couzins,’ died quietly in poverty in December 1913. Only six people attended her funeral. Couzins was buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri, with a U.S. marshal star pinned to her chest. In 1950, women lawyers of St. Louis and Kansas City erected a tombstone over Couzins' unmarked grave as a memorial of her historic career.”
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