Thursday, June 20, 2024

But the conservative majority on the Wisconsin Supreme Court named the State Law Library after him in 2016

 
Can't say I'm all choked up about this.

Headlines (top to bottom):  NBC News,  Wisconsin State Law Library

From the Journal Sentinel:
The change comes just a little more than seven years after the library was named for Prosser, who retired from the court in July 2016, and two days after Democratic Gov. Tony Evers proclaimed June 17 "Wisconsin Women Lawyers Day." 
Goodell was admitted by the Rock County Circuit Court to practice law in Wisconsin on June 17, 1874. One year later, she was barred from representing her client in an appeal to the state's high court. Goodell then drafted legislation to guarantee the right for women to practice law in Wisconsin, which was signed into law by Gov. Harrison Ludington in 1877. 
Following the law's enactment, she became the first woman to brief a case for consideration by the state Supreme Court in 1879, and argued and won her first case shortly before her death in 1880. 
"Naming the State Law Library in Lavinia Goodell's honor is an opportunity to recognize her legacy and inspire the next generation of women in Wisconsin," Justice Ann Walsh Bradley, the court's longest-serving justice, said in a statement.

Related posts: 
Supreme Court justices meddle in conference planning.  (3/14/2016)
Bought and Paid For:  Wisconsin's Conservative Supreme Court Justices and their Tainted Campaign Contributions.  (5/14/2015)

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