America's First Woman Lawyer: The Biography of Myra Bradwell
Jane M. Friedman. Prometheus Books, $34.98 (217pp) ISBN 978-0-87975-812-7
After she applied to practice law in 1869 in her home state of Illinois and was denied, Myra Bradwell (1831-1894) instead became a legal journalist, publishing and editing the influential Chicago Legal News. In this heavily footnoted and prodigiously researched study, Wayne State University law professor Friedman posits that Bradwell's achievements have been overlooked because her disagreements with feminist Susan B. Anthony led Anthony to exclude Bradwell from her definitive History of Woman Suffrage. Using her journal as a forum, Bradwell successfully agitated for judicial reform and women's rights, particularly the right of married women to enter the professions. She and her husband James, an attorney, obtained the release of Mary Todd Lincoln, who had been committed to an insane asylum by her son. Although Friedman celebrates Bradwell's legal skill and tenacity, she also acknowledges her frequent lapses into duplicity and anti-Semitism in this objective portrait. Illustrations not seen by PW. (May)
Details
Reviewed on: 05/03/1993
Genre: Nonfiction
Open Ebook - 240 pages - 978-1-63388-631-5
Paperback - 232 pages - 978-1-63388-630-8