American Decades
Allen, Florence Ellinwood 1884-1959
PIONEER WOMAN JUDGE
Background.
As a teenager in Salt Lake City, Utah, Florence Ellinwood Allen attended a lecture by suffragist leader Susan B. Anthony. Subsequently, she became Anthony's protégé and a lifelong feminist activist. After attending the University of Chicago Law School (1909-1910) and graduating from New York University Law School in 1913, Allen was admitted to the Ohio bar in 1914 and established a law practice in Cleveland that specialized in legal problems of special concern to women. She was appointed assistant county prosecutor for Cuyahoga County in 1919.
Judicial Career.
In 1921 Allen was the first woman in American history to become judge of a Common Pleas Court, and in 1926 she was the first female to be appointed associate justice on the Ohio State Supreme Court. Judge Allen was a "no-nonsense" jurist. In 1925 she imposed the death penalty on Frank Motto, a notorious Ohio...
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1920's Law and Justice
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Hall-Mills Murder Case
- Involuntary Sterilization: Eugenics and Public Policy
- Law Enforcement: The Hoover-Donovan Feud
- Law Enforcement: The Legal Basis for the Wiretap
- The Leopold and Loeb Case and the Development of the Insanity Plea
- The Limits of Free Speech
- Race Relations: Death in a Desegregated Neighborhood
- Race Relations: Denying Black Suffrage
- Race Relations: A Legal Definition of Color
- Race Relations: The Rise and Fall of the Ku Klux Klan
- The Sacco and Vanzetti Case
- The Saint Valentine's Day Massacre
- The Schwimmer Case: Citizenship and the Conscientious Objector
- The Scopes "Monkey" Trial and the Separation of Church and State
- A Victory for Academic Freedom
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1920–1929
