American Decades
People in the News
In 1906 Harvey Humphrey Baker, a special justice on the Brookline, Massachusetts, Police Court, was appointed Boston's first juvenile court judge. Eager to resolve the problems of youth through the juvenile court system, Baker also advocated clinics where social workers and others could try to resolve the more "baffling cases" of troubled youth.
In 1903 Simeon E. Baldwin, a Connecticut lawyer and a founder of the American Bar Association, attended an international congress on prisons in Budapest. The following year he was vice president of the Universal Congress of Lawyers and Jurists in Saint Louis, and in 1905 he was president of both the Association of American Law Schools and the American Historical Association.
In 1908 Kate Barnard, Oklahoma's commissioner of prisons, investigated prisons in Kansas, where some Oklahoma prisoners were being held. Shocking revelations of conditions in Kansas...
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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
