I was sitting in the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center court house in downtown Los Angeles. I got called for jury duty. A responsibility that most upstanding Americans expended their most creative efforts to get out of serving. 300 of my fellow Americans failed to find that perfect excuse.
I personally don’t mind taking a few days away from the Salt Mine but it is the feeling of being “recruited” that is uncomfortable. It is also the feeling that there is a story around every corner, that there are some nasty people in the world and there are some folks stories I’d just assume not to have stuck in my head.
But with every dark cloud there is a silver lining. The court had information books and brochures on Clara Shortridge Foltz. This was a phenomenal woman. In 1878 Clara was the first woman to be admitted to practice law in the state of California. She was also the first woman to serve as deputy district attorney in Los Angeles.
But I’m getting ahead of the story. Clara got married at 15 years of age, had five kids, husband leaves her for another woman, she has got to figure out what to do, decides on being a lawyer to pursue a dream and to provide for her children and is told she cannot because she is a woman. Phew!
That is just the warm-up. Clara first had to get the law changed so that she as a women could practice law. She then had to sue the Hastings College of Law who refused to admit her on the grounds that:
“Lady lawyers were dangerous to justice inasmuch as an impartial jury would be impossible when a lovely lady pleased the case of the criminal.”
Not only did she win her case and the appeal that followed; Clara went on to introduce all kinds of legal innovations such as establishing public defenders for poor and indigent people, the removal having prisoners placed in iron cages in the courtroom and to separate juveniles from adult prisoners.
So who are some of the beneficiaries of Clara’s work. In the legal blogosphere there is actually too many to count but to give you a taste of the action:
Law School
Professional Paths
Jumping the Bar
For More Information on Clara Shortridge Foltz
So, yes showing up and doing your civic duty is an educational experience. Not necessarily fun but you do what you have to do.
Contributing Editor Gena Haskett is not a lawyer and after today would like to go a very long time before she sees the inside of a courtroom again. In the meantime she hangs out at Out On the Stoop and PCCLibTech
Comments
Thanks for telling us Clara's story!
She is truly an inspiration, and I'm glad that something interesting came from your jury service! the excuses people come up with to keep women from participating in society completely amaze me. If only we could focus half that creativity toward something productive...
Suzanne Reisman, Contributing Editor - Feminism & Gender
Campaign for Unshaved Snatch (CUSS) & Oth