List of law schools attended by United States Supreme Court Justices
The Constitution does not require that federal judges have any particular educational background, but the work of the Court involved complex questions of law - ranging from constitutional law to administrative law to admiralty law - and consequentially, a legal education has become a de facto prerequisite to appointment on the Supreme Court. As of 2009[update], every person who has been nominated to the Court has been an attorney.[1]
Before the advent of modern law schools in the United States, justices, like most attorneys of the time, completed their legal studies by "reading law" (studying under and acting as an apprentice to more experienced attorneys) rather than attend a formal program. The first Justice to be appointed who had attended an actual law school was Levi Woodbury, appointed to the Court in 1846. Woodbury had attended Tapping Reeve Law School in Litchfield, Connecticut, the most prestigious law school in the United States in that day, prior to his admission to the bar in 1812. However, Woodbury did not earn a law degree. Woodbury's successor on the Court, Benjamin Robbins Curtis, who received his law degree from Harvard Law School in 1832, and was appointed to the Court in 1851, was the first Justice to bear such a credential.[2]
Associate Justice James F. Byrnes, whose short tenure lasted from June 1941 to October 1942, was the last Justice without a law degree to be appointed; Stanley Forman Reed, who served on the Court from 1938 to 1957, was the last sitting Justice from such a background. In total, of the 111 Justices appointed to the Court, 46 have had law degrees, an additional 18 attended some law school but did not receive a degree, and 47 received their legal education without any law school attendance.[2]
Four or more Justices
- Harry Blackmun
- Louis Brandeis
- William J. Brennan, Jr.
- Stephen Breyer
- Harold Hitz Burton
- Felix Frankfurter
- Melville Fuller - did not graduate; Chief Justice
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg — graduated from Columbia Law School
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
- Elena Kagan
- Anthony Kennedy
- William Henry Moody - did not graduate
- Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr.
- John Roberts - Chief Justice
- Edward Terry Sanford
- Antonin Scalia
- David Hackett Souter
- Samuel Alito
- Henry Baldwin
- David Davis
- Abe Fortas
- George Shiras, Jr.
- Sonia Sotomayor
- Potter Stewart
- William Strong
- Clarence Thomas
- Byron White
- Benjamin N. Cardozo - completed two years, did not graduate
- William O. Douglas
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg - also attended Harvard Law School
- Charles Evans Hughes - Chief Justice
- Joseph McKenna - studied at the law school, did not graduate
- Stanley Forman Reed - also attended University of Virginia School of Law, did not graduate from either
- Harlan Fiske Stone - Chief Justice
Three Justices
- George Sutherland
- Frank Murphy
- William Rufus Day
- Henry Baldwin
- Ward Hunt
- Levi Woodbury - first justice to have attended law school
Two Justices
- David Josiah Brewer
- Robert H. Jackson - completed one year of the two year program
- Willis Van Devanter
- William Howard Taft - Chief Justice (and former President)
- Howell Edmunds Jackson
- Horace Harmon Lurton
- Arthur Goldberg
- John Paul Stevens
- Sandra Day O'Connor
- William Rehnquist - Chief Justice
- James Clark McReynolds
- Stanley Forman Reed - also attended Columbia Law School, did not graduate from either
- Joseph Rucker Lamar
- Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr.
One Justice
- Thurgood Marshall
[3] Benjamin Harrison School of Law, now Indiana University School of Law - Indianapolis
Benjamin Harrison School of Law
- John Marshall Harlan II
- John Marshall Harlan
- Edward White - Chief Justice
- Hugo Black
- Earl Warren - Chief Justice
- Wiley Blount Rutledge
- Charles Evans Whittaker
- Owen Josephus Roberts
- Tom C. Clark
- Warren Earl Burger - Chief Justice
University or college trained
These justices were educated at the equivalent of what would today be an undergraduate level, but did not receive legal education at the graduate level, the model under which law schools in the U.S. are currently organized.
- George Sutherland - Also attended University of Michigan Law School
- Pierce Butler
- John Hessin Clarke
- Frederick Moore Vinson - Chief Justice
- James Wilson - also attended the Universities of St. Andrews, Edinburgh, and Glasgow, Scotland
- John Marshall - Chief Justice
- Philip Pendleton Barbour
- Bushrod Washington
- John Blair
- John Jay – Chief Justice
- Samuel Blatchford
- Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar
- Oliver Ellsworth - Chief Justice
- William Paterson
- Mahlon Pitney
- Joseph P. Bradley
- Joseph McKenna - also took law courses at Columbia Law School but was not enrolled in a degree program
- Frank Murphy
- John Archibald Campbell
- William R. Day
- Thomas Todd
- David Josiah Brewer (1851–1854, transferred to and graduated from Yale)
- Sherman Minton
- David Josiah Brewer (transferred from Wesleyan University)
No university legal education
Some justices received no legal education in a university setting, but were instead either trained through apprenticeships or were self-taught, as was common with many lawyers prior to the mid-20th century.
- James F. Byrnes
- Samuel Chase
- John Hessin Clarke
- James Iredell
- Thomas Johnson
See also
References
- ^ Jeffrey A. Segal, Harold J. Spaeth, The Supreme Court and the Attitudinal Model Revisited (2002) p. 182.
- ^ a b Henry Julian Abraham, Justices, Presidents, and Senators: A History of the U.S. Supreme Court Appointments from Washington to Bush II (2007), p. 49.
- ^ Gugin, Linda (1997). Sherman Minton: New Deal Senator, Cold War Justice. Indiana Historical Society. pp. 51. ISBN 0-87195-116-9.
External links