Suffolk University Law School

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Sargent Hall
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Sargent Hall
Suffolk Law School
Suff
Motto “Honestas et Diligentia"
Established 1906
Type Private
President David Sargent
Staff 193
Students 1,672
Location Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Campus Urban
Website www.law.suffolk.edu

Suffolk University Law School is a private law school in downtown Boston, Massachusetts, United States. One of the oldest law schools in New England, Suffolk was founded in 1906 by Gleason Archer, Sr. to provide a legal education for those who traditionally lacked the opportunity to study law because of socio-economic or racial discrimination. Suffolk has been co-educational since 1937.

The law school currently has both day and evening (part-time) divisions. The school is located in the newly built Sargent Hall on Tremont Street in downtown Boston. There are over 200 upper level electives offered at the law school, and the school is consistently ranked one of the most technologically advanced schools in the nation.[1] Admission to Suffolk is competitive. In 2005, 43% of applicants were admitted to the law school.[2] Suffolk regularly publishes several law reviews, to which students, faculty, and other scholars contribute. The school is featured annually in the Princeton Review and U.S. News & World Report rankings. Suffolk has attracted notable scholars and prominent speakers ranging from John F. Kennedy to William Rehnquist. Suffolk University alumni are found in high level judicial, political, and private positions throughout the United States. With nearly 17,000 alumni, Suffolk is one of the largest law schools in the Northeast.

Contents

[edit] Suffolk Law School in literature, film and culture

[edit] Prominent alumni

[edit] Prominent faculty and trustees

  • Joseph Glannon, Professor, well known writer of Torts and Civil Procedure texts
  • Joseph P. Hoar, Trustee, Commander of U.S. central command

[edit] Honorary degree recipients and speakers

[edit] External links

[edit] See also