An extra special story for the end of the year . . .

This is the tale of someone who wrote the original complaint in Brown v. Board and later became the first black woman appointed to the Federal Bench.

That's the extraordinary Constance Baker Motley and this is her ⚖️🧵 . . .
Constance Baker was born in 1921 in New Haven to parents who had emigrated from Nevis.

She was the 9th of 12 children.

Her father, McCullough Alva Baker, was a chef at @Yale, including at Skull & Bones. ☠️ Her mother, Rachel Huggins, would go on to found the New Haven NAACP.
Constance's family could not afford to send her to college.

But, as luck and talent would have it, Clarence Blakeslee - a former member of the Yale Corporation & "New Haven philanthropist" - saw her speak at a community center & was so impressed he offered to fund her education.
That education began with Fisk University in Nashville – a choice she made in part because she had never been to the south.

By her sophomore year, she was ready to move back north.

She transferred to @nyuniversity, graduating in 1943, and then enrolled @ColumbiaLaw.
After graduation, Constance went to work as the first woman attorney for the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund.

Who hired her?

The Fund’s founder & future Supreme Court Justice, Thurgood Marshall.
It is difficult to capture all that Constance accomplished at LDF. In the words of the @nytimes, she "fought nearly every important civil rights case for two decades."

This included writing the complaint in Brown and arguing 10 cases before the Supreme Court 🏛️- she won 9.
As one example, Constance was in charge of the legal campaign that resulted in the admission of James Meredith to the University of Mississippi in 1962.

(She later said that the day he accepted his diploma was the most thrilling day of her life.)
But in 1964, Constance decided to try something different: politics.

She became the first black woman elected to the New York State Senate. Soon after, she became the first woman elected Manhattan Borough President.
In 1966, on the recommendation of Senator Robert F. Kennedy of New York - and over the protests of some Southern senators -

President Lyndon Johnson appointed Constance to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
This made Constance Baker Motley the first black woman in U.S. history to sit on the Federal Bench.

She became Chief Judge of that distinguished District in 1982, before taking senior status in 1986.

(Below is the Southern District the year Judge Motley joined the Court.)
Looking back on her life, Judge Motley wrote:

"I was the kind of person who would not be put down...I rejected any notion that my race or sex would bar my success in life."

In her success, she created the success of so many others. In not being put down, she lifted us all up.❤️

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More from @marinklevy

26 Dec
We know that Judge Learned Hand’s childhood nickname was “Bunny.”

But his pet name for his wife, Frances?

His dearest Kitten / Kitty. Image
Their beginning was very quaint.

He was 29 years old and "inexperienced with women" when he met Frances Fincke on a summer trip to Quebec in 1901.

Frances was . . . not sold on Learned. Image
Among other things, this Bryn Mawr graduate wanted independence, and worried that she would be "the doormat of a man of genius" if she agreed to marry him.

Frances waited for a year before deciding to accept his proposal - whereupon they kissed for the first time!
Read 4 tweets
17 Dec
Oh, we have a special story today – this one is about Jane Bolin, an extraordinary person who was the very first black woman to become a Judge in U.S. history.

A ⚖️🧵 all about Judge Bolin and her amazing life is coming your way in 3 . . . 2 . . . 1 . . .
Jane Matilda Bolin was born in April 1908 in Poughkeepsie, NY, to parents who were pathbreakers in their own right.

Her father was the first black graduate of @WilliamsCollege and was a lawyer – also serving as the President of the Dutchess County Bar Association. ⚖️
Jane later said a key moment of her childhood was reading the NAACP's The Crisis & seeing photos of lynchings:

"It is easy to imagine how a young, protected child who sees portrayals of brutality . . . becomes determined to contribute in her own small way to social justice."
Read 14 tweets
16 Dec
There is a great deal to appreciate in the 5th Circuit's big opinion this week in Cargill v. Garland, upholding the federal bump stock ban.

But I want to note an important judicial administration move that the Court made that the brilliant @tnarecha & I wrote about last year ...
The Court noted at the end of its opinion that “Congress may wish to further clarify whether various novel devices qualify as machine guns for purposes of federal law.”

How did it propose letting Congress know? Through the little-known Statutory Opinion Transmission project ...
The brainchild of Robert A. Katzmann & Russell Wheeler, the Project established a protocol under which federal appellate judges might "send to Congress, without comment, opinions that describe possible technical problems in statutes," so that Congress may respond as it sees fit.
Read 7 tweets
14 Dec
A quick rundown on where things currently stand with federal Court of Appeals vacancies and why timing is about to get even more crucial . . .

(mini ⚖️🧵, 1 / x)
According to the AO, we have, or are about to have, 14 Court of Appeals vacancies that do not have nominees.

The vacancies created by Judges who have already taken senior status or retired are from:

Brooks Smith (3rd Cir)

Mary Beck Briscoe (10th Cir)

Bev Martin (11th Cir)
Vacancies that we expect to be created (upon the confirmation of the Judge’s successor or at a set future date) are from:

David Tatel (DC Cir)

O. Rogeriee Thompson (1st Cir)

José Cabranes (2d Cir)

Susan Carney (2d Cir)

Ted McKee (3rd Cir)

Henry Floyd (4th Cir)

. . .
Read 6 tweets
8 Dec
I want to tell a story tonight about a special man who almost certainly would have had a seat on the Supreme Court had his health not failed him.

A man who served on the 8th Circuit alongside his own brother.

That man is Richard Arnold, and this is his ⚖️🧵 . . .
Richard Arnold was born in 1936 in Texarkana.⭐️

His brother later wrote, "One of my early memories is sitting around in our library listening to my 16-year-old brother teach our mother ancient Greek. (I wonder if there was anyone else in Miller County ... doing that that day?)"
Richard took his love of Greek to @Yale, where he studied classics.

He then attended @Harvard_Law, where he finished 🥇 in his class.

A clerkship with Justice Brennan followed . . . 🏛️
Read 12 tweets
1 Dec
Alright now. Today marks the 141st anniversary of the *very first time a woman argued before the Supreme Court.* 🏛️

Who was the woman and how did she manage to argue the case in 1880?

Well her name was Belva A. Lockwood and clearly we’re going to need a ⚖️🧵 about it . . .
Belva Ann Bennett was born in New York in 1830, and her early life was hard. Really hard.

She was married at 18 and widowed at 24, with a toddler to raise.

So she taught school 🔤. . . only to discover that male teachers were getting paid twice as much or more . . . 😡
When Belva went to the school trustees, she later said – “The answer I received opened my eyes and raised my dander.”

(I just knew you would ❤️ her.)

And what was that answer? “I can’t help you; you cannot help yourself, for it is the way of the world.” 😲
Read 14 tweets

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