American Decades
Lindsey, Ben B. 1869-1943
JUDGE
Background.
Ben B. Lindsey understood what it was like to be a troubled youth. His father, a Confederate veteran, had moved the family to Colorado when Ben was eleven and committed suicide five years later. Ben left school to support his family, working simultaneously as a janitor, a newspaper carrier, and an office boy to a lawyer. Overwork and despair drove Ben to attempt suicide at nineteen, though his failure inspired him to change direction. He began to read law, and though not a high school graduate, at age twenty-five he was admitted to the Colorado bar.
Lindsey's Awakening.
In 1899 Lindsey became a public guardian and administrator, a minor position in Colorado's rudimentary public welfare system. Two years later he was appointed a county judge. He later recalled a case from about this time of a young boy caught stealing coal. Under common law, children older than the age of seven...
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1900's Law and Justice
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Dilemma of Second-Class Citizens: Race Riots and Civil Disorder
- Insanity and Guilt: The Trials of Harry Thaw
- The Insular Cases: The Constitution Follows The Flag
- Labor on Trial: The Murder of Frank Steunenberg
- Lochner v. New York (1905)
- Lynching and Lawlessness
- Prohibition and the Temperance Movement
- Reviving the Sherman Act: The Northern Securities Case
- Women, Louis Brandeis, and the Law: Muller v. Oregon (1908)
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1900–1909
