Bertha Putnam

Bertha Haven Putnam (1872 February 26, 1960) was an American historian, specialising on the judicial and administrative history of medieval England.

Putnam grew up in Philadelphia, the daughter of George Haven Putnam, author and publisher, and son of the publisher George Palmer Putnam. She attended Bryn Mawr College, and got her bachelor's degree in 1893. She later taught at the Brearley School in New York City, before getting her doctorate from Columbia University in 1908. She started teaching at Mount Holyoke College in 1908, and was made professor in 1924. Here she remained until her retirement in 1937.[1] Her career, from Bryn Mawr to Holyoke, ran parallel to that of Nellie Neilson, a fellow medievalist.[2] She also worked closely with Eileen Power and Helen Cam.[3] An attack of shingles left her partially blind in the late 1940s. Putnam died of arteriosclerosis in South Hadley, Massachusetts in 1960.[4]

Her main focus was the office of the Justice of the Peace, and how it developed from the Conservator of the Peace in the early- to mid-14th century. In particular she proved the importance of the Statute of Labourers in giving these officers the right to decide cases, and thereby establishing them as justices. The change was sanctioned by the Statute of Westminster of 1361.[5] Some of her main contentions, particularly that this process represented a radical devolution of judicial authority to the localities, have since been challenged.[6]

Bibliography

References

  1. Hastings and Kimball, pp. 144-7.
  2. Hastings and Kimball.
  3. Hastings and Kimball, pp. 157-8.
  4. Scanlon, p. 182.
  5. Hastings and Kimball, p. 153.
  6. Musson and Ormrod, pp. 2-3.

Sources

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