Charlotte E. Ray

Charlotte E. Ray
Born (1850-01-13)January 13, 1850
New York City
Died January 4, 1911(1911-01-04) (aged 60)
Woodside, Long Island
Nationality American
Other names Charlotte E. Fraim
Alma mater Howard University
Occupation Attorney, Teacher
Movement Colored Conventions Movement

Charlotte E. Ray (January 13, 1850 – January 4, 1911) was the first Black American female lawyer in the United States.[1][2] Ray graduated from Howard University School of Law in 1872. She was also the first female admitted to the District of Columbia Bar, and the first woman admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia.[3] Her admission was used as a precedent by women in other states who sought admission to the bar.[4]

Ray opened her own law office and ran advertisements in a newspaper run by Frederick Douglass.[5] However, she only practiced for a few years because prejudice against African Americans and women made her business unsustainable.[6] Ray eventually moved to New York, where she became a teacher in Brooklyn. She was involved in the women's suffrage movement[7] and joined the National Association of Colored Women.

Early life

Charlotte Ray was born in New York City to Charlotte Augusta Burroughs and Reverend Charles Bennett Ray. Reverend Ray was an important figure in the abolitionist movement and edited a paper called The Colored American. Charlotte had six siblings, including two sisters, Henrietta Cordelia and Florence. Education was important to her father, who made sure each of his girls went to college. Charlotte attended a school called the Institution for the Education of Colored Youth in Washington, D.C., graduating in 1869.[8] It was one of a few places where a black woman could gain proper education.

After this Ray became a teacher at Howard University in the Normal and Preparatory Department, which was the University's Prep School. While teaching at Howard, she registered in the Law Department, as C. E. Ray.[8] Charlotte Ray graduated on February 27, 1872, completing a three-year program, as the first woman to graduate from the Howard University School of Law. Sources claim she graduated Phi Beta Kappa,[9] but Howard University did not receive its Phi Beta Kappa chapter until 1953.[10]

While in law school she is believed to have specialized in corporate law. She has been identified as the woman referred to by General O. O. Howard, the founder and first president of Howard University, as having "read us a thesis on corporations, not copied from the books but from her brain, a clear incisive analysis of one of the most delicate legal questions."[7] Others suggest that Mary Ann Shadd Cary was the person in question.[11]

Admission controversy

Some claim she was admitted to the Howard School of Law in the District of Columbia in 1872 because she applied under the name “C. E. Ray” and that Ray used an alternate name to disguise her gender so that her admission would not be instantly revoked.[12] According to others, her use of initials is not proven, and it would not have been needed, because Howard University at this time had a clearly articulated policy of acceptance of blacks and of women.[8]

Independent practice

Ray was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar on March 2, 1872, and admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia on April 23, 1872.[7][13] Her appointment was noted in the Woman's Journal and gained her inclusion as one of the Women of the Century.[14] Ray began her independent practice of commercial law in 1872, advertising in newspapers such as the New National Era and Citizen, owned by Frederick Douglass.[4][5] Some sources suggest that she hoped to specialize in real estate law, which would involve less appearances in court.[7]

Nonetheless, there is evidence that she was active in court. She was the first woman to practice and argue in the District of Columbia Supreme Court,[3] where she pleaded the case of Gadley v. Gadley (vt. Godling v. Godling), No. 4278, filed June 3, 1875. In this case, she defended an uneducated woman petitioning for divorce from an abusive husband. The arguments were based on the grounds of "habitual drunkenness" and "cruelty of treatment, endangering the life or health of the party complaining". Ray's petition vividly evokes the violence of the marriage, describing an incident in which the husband first broke the bedstead, so that the wife lay down on the floor, and then "went down stairs, got an ax and returning, ripped up the planks in the floor", with the intention of causing his wife to fall through and break her neck.[8][15]

Charlotte Ray was said to be eloquent, authoritative, and "one of the best lawyers on corporations in the country."[4][16][17] Yet despite her Howard connections and advertisements, she was unable to maintain a steady client flow, sufficient to support herself. Regardless of her legal knowledge and corporate law expertise, not enough people were willing to trust a black woman with their cases.[6][7] Wisconsin lawyer Kate Kane Rossi, in 1897, recalled that "Miss Ray … although a lawyer of decided ability, on account of prejudice was not able to obtain sufficient legal business and had to give up … active practice."[7][18] Instead she returned to teaching, working in the Brooklyn school system.[7]

Personal life

Poet Henrietta Cordelia Ray was her sister. At one point all three sisters were teachers. Charlotte gave up teaching for a period to practice law, and Henrietta Cordelia gave up teaching to obtain her masters and write poetry.[19]

Ray attended the National Woman Suffrage Association's New York convention in 1876.[20] After 1895 Ray seems to have been active in the National Association of Colored Women.[8]

She married in the late 1880s and became Charlotte E. Fraim.[8]

In 1897 she moved to Woodside, Long Island, where she died of a huge case bronchitis at the age of 60 on January 4, 1911.[8][19][20]

Posthumous honors

In March 2006, The Northeastern University School of Law (Boston, MA) chapter of Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity International chose to honor Ray by naming their newly chartered chapter after her, in recognition of her place as the first female African-American attorney.[21]

References

  1. Wallenfeldt, Jeff, ed. (2010). Black American Biographies: The Journey of Achievement. New York: Britannica Educational Pub. p. 114. ISBN 1-61530-176-3.
  2. Smith, J. Clay, ed. (1998). Rebels in Law: voices in history of Black women lawyers. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. p. 283. ISBN 0472108832.
  3. 1 2 Segal, Geraldine R. (1982). Blacks in the Law: Philadelphia and the nation. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0812278542.
  4. 1 2 3 Smith, J. Clay (1993). Emancipation : the making of the black lawyer, 1844-1944. Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0812231813.
  5. 1 2 Contemporary Black Biography: Profiles from the international Black community. Detroit, Mich.: Gale Research Inc. 2007. ISBN 0787679321.
  6. 1 2 Van Winkle, Sara. "Legal Resistance", in Black Women in America, Second Edition, edited by Darlene Clark Hine. Oxford African American Studies Center.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Thomas, Dorothy. "Ray, Charlotte E. (1850-1911)", in Black Women in America, Second Edition, edited by Darlene Clark Hine. Oxford African American Studies Center.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Osborne, Tonya Michelle (2001). "Charlotte E. Ray: A Black Woman Lawyer" (PDF). Stanford Law School. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
  9. Hine, Darlene Clark, ed. (2005). Black Women in America (2nd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 30. ISBN 0195156773.
  10. http://coas.howard.edu/phibetakappa/
  11. McDaniel, Cecily Barker (2007). 'Fearing I Shall Not Do My Duty to My Race If I Remain Silent': Law and Its Call to African American Women, 1872-1932. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University (Ph.D.Dissertation).
  12. Drachman, Virginia G. (2001). Sisters in Law: women lawyers in modern American history (1st Harvard University Press pbk ed.). Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674006941.
  13. Buchanan, Paul D. (2009). The American Women's Rights Movement: a chronology of events and of opportunities from 1600 to 2008. Boston: Branden Books. p. 71. ISBN 0828321604.
  14. Hanaford, Phebe Ann (1876). Women of the Century. B.B. Russell.
  15. Smith, Jr., J. Clay (2000). "Charlotte E. Ray pleads before court". Howard Law Journal. 43: 121–139.
  16. Majors, Monroe A. (1893). Noted Negro women, their triumphs and activities. Chicago: Donohue & Henneberry. pp. 183–184.
  17. Morello, Karen Berger (1986). The Invisible Bar: The Woman Lawyer in America, 1638 to the present. New York: Random House. ISBN 0394529642.
  18. Chicago Legal News, October 23, 1897.
  19. 1 2 Smith, Jr., J. Clay (1997). "Black Women Lawyers: 125 Years at the Bar, 100 Years in the Legal Academy". Howard Law Journal. 40 (369). Retrieved May 1, 2014.
  20. 1 2 James, Edward T.; James, Janet Wilson; Boyer, Paul S., eds. (1971). Notable American women, 1607-1950; a biographical dictionary. (2nd ed.). Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674627318.
  21. "Student Organizations: Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity International". Northeastern University School of Law. Archived from the original on February 2, 2012. Retrieved January 27, 2012.
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