List of Presidents of the American Bar Association
This list of the Presidents of the American Bar Association includes all presidents of the association, which was formed in 1878 to represent the interests of lawyers, accredit law schools, and create and maintain a code of ethics. The American Bar Association is a voluntary bar association of lawyers and law students not specific to any jurisdiction in the United States.
The association comprises 410,000 members, who are represented by a House of Delegates, the organization's primary body, which acts to create and adopt new policies and recommendations pertaining to the practice of law. The House of Delegates and the association itself are headed by the President, who generally serves a one year term.
Presidents
# | Name | Term | State | Comments | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | James O. Broadhead | 1878–1879 | Missouri | American Bar Association co-founder | [1] |
2 | Benjamin H. Bristow | 1879–1880 | New York | [2] | |
3 | Edward John Phelps | 1880–1881 | Vermont | ||
4 | Clarkson Nott Potter | 1881–1882 | New York | Former Congressman | |
5 | Alexander Lawton | 1882–1883 | Georgia | ||
6 | Cortlandt Parker | 1883–1884 | New Jersey | ||
7 | John W. Stevenson | 1884–1885 | Kentucky | Governor/Senator | |
8 | William Allen Butler | 1885–1886 | New York | ||
9 | Thomas J. Semmes | 1886–1887 | Louisiana | ||
10 | George G. Wright | 1887–1888 | Iowa | former Senator | |
11 | David Dudley Field | 1888–1889 | New York | ||
12 | Henry Hitchcock | 1889–1890 | Missouri | American Bar Association co-founder | [3] |
13 | Simeon Eben Baldwin | 1890–1891 | Connecticut | ||
14 | John Forrest Dillon | 1891–1892 | New York | ||
15 | John Randolph Tucker | 1892–1893 | Virginia | [4] | |
16 | Thomas Cooley | 1893–1894 | Michigan | ||
17 | James C. Carter | 1894–1895 | New York | ||
18 | Moorfield Storey | 1895–1896 | Massachusetts | ||
19 | James M. Woolworth | 1896–1897 | Nebraska | ||
20 | William Wirt Howe | 1897–1898 | Louisiana | ||
21 | Joseph H. Choate | 1898–1899 | New York| | ||
22 | Charles F. Manderson | 1899–1900 | Nebraska | former Senator | [5] |
23 | Edmund Whetmore | 1900–1901 | New York | [6] | |
24 | U.M. Rose | 1901–1902 | Arkansas | ||
25 | Francis Rawle | 1902-1903 | Pennsylvania | ||
26 | James Hagerman | 1902–1903 | Missouri | [3] | |
27 | Henry St. George Tucker, III | 1904–1905 | Virginia | [7] | |
28 | George R. Peck | 1905–1906 | Illinois | [8] | |
29 | Alton B. Parker | 1906–1907 | New York | [9] | |
30 | Jacob M. Dickinson | 1907–1908 | Illinois | future United States Secretary of War | |
31 | Frederick William Lehmann | 1908–1910 | Missouri | Future US Solicitor General | [3] |
32 | Charles F. Libby | 1909-1910 | Maine | ||
33 | Edgar Howard Farrar | 1910–1911 | Louisiana | [10] | |
34 | Stephen S. Gregory | 1911-1912 | Illinois | ||
35 | Frank B. Kellogg | 1912–1913 | Minnesota | Future US Secretary of State | |
36 | William Howard Taft | 1913–1914 | District of Columbia | Former US President Future US Supreme Court Chief Justice |
|
37 | Peter W. Meldrim | 1914-1915 | Georgia | ||
38 | Elihu Root | 1915-1916 | New York | ||
39 | George Sutherland | 1916–1917 | Utah | Future US Supreme Court Justice | |
40 | Walter George Smith | 1917–1918 | Pennsylvania | ||
41 | GeorgeT.Page | 1918-1919 | Illinois | ||
42 | Hampton L. Carson | 1919–1921 | Pennsylvania | [11] | |
43 | William A. Biount | 1920-1921 | Florida | ||
44 | Cordenio A. Severance | 1921–1922 | Minnesota | ||
45 | John W. Davis | 1922-1923 | New York | ||
46 | R. E. L. Saner | 1923-1924 | Texas | ||
47 | Charles E. Hughes | 1925–1926 | New York | Future US Supreme Court Chief Justice | |
48 | Chester Isaiah Long | 1926-1927 | Kansas | ||
49 | Charles S. Whitman | 1926-1927 | New York | ||
50 | Silas H. Strawn | 1927-1928 | Illinois | ||
51 | Gurney E. Newlin | 1928-1929 | California | ||
52 | Henry Upson Sims | 1929-1930 | Alabama | ||
53 | Josiah Marvel | 1930-1931 | Delaware | ||
54 | Charles A. Boston 4 | 1930-1931 | New York | ||
55 | Guy A. Thompson | 1931-1932 | Missouri | ||
56 | Clarence E. Martin | 1932-1933 | West Virginia | ||
57 | Earle W. Evans | 1933-1934 | Kansas | ||
58 | Scott M. Loftin | 1934–1935 | Florida | ||
59 | William L. Ransom | 1935–1936 | New York | ||
60 | Frederick Harold Stinchfield | 1936–1937 | Minnesota | [12] | |
61 | Arthur T. Vanderbilt | 1937–1938 | New Jersey | ||
62 | Frank J. Hogan | 1938–1939 | District of Columbia | ||
63 | Charles A. Beardsley | 1939–1940 | California | ||
64 | Jacob M. Lashly | 1940–1941 | Missouri | ||
65 | Walter P. Armstrong | 1941–1942 | |||
66 | George Maurice Morris | 1942–1943 | District of Columbia | ||
67 | Joseph W. Henderson | 1943–1944 | Pennsylvania | ||
68 | David A. Simmons | 1944–1945 | Texas | ||
69 | Willis Smith | 1945–1946 | North Carolina | ||
70 | Carl B. Rix | 1946–1947 | Wisconsin | ||
71 | Tappan Gregory | 1947–1948 | Illinois | ||
72 | Frank E. Holman | 1948–1949 | District of Columbia | ||
73 | Harold J. Gallagher | 1949–1950 | New York | ||
74 | Cody Fowler | 1950–1951 | Florida | ||
75 | Howard L. Barkdull | 1951–1952 | Ohio | ||
76 | Robert G. Storey | 1952–1953 | Texas | ||
77 | William James Jameson | 1953–1954 | Montana | ||
78 | Loyd Wright | 1954–1955 | California | ||
79 | E. Smythe Gambrell | 1955–1956 | Georgia | ||
80 | David Farrow Maxwell | 1956–1957 | Pennsylvania | ||
81 | Charles S. Rhyne | 1957–1958 | District of Columbia | ||
82 | Ross L. Malone, Jr. | 1958–1959 | New Mexico | Former Deputy Attorney General, 1952–53 | |
83 | John D. Randall | 1959–1960 | Iowa | ||
84 | Whitney N. Seymour, Sr. | 1960–1961 | New York | Former Assistant Solicitor General, 1931–33 | |
85 | John C. Satterfield | 1961–1962 | Mississippi | ||
86 | Sylvester C. Smith, Jr. | 1962–1963 | New Jersey | ||
87 | Walter E. Craig | 1963–1964 | Arizona | ||
88 | Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr. | 1964–1965 | Virginia | Future US Supreme Court Justice | [13] |
89 | Edward W. Kuhn | 1965–1966 | Tennessee | ||
90 | Orison S. Marden | 1966–1967 | New York | ||
91 | Earl F. Morris | 1967–1968 | Ohio | ||
92 | William T. Gossett | 1968–1969 | Michigan | ||
93 | Bernard Segal | 1969–1970 | Pennsylvania | [14] | |
94 | Edward L. Wright | 1970–1971 | Arkansas | ||
95 | Leon Jaworski | 1971–1972 | Texas | ||
96 | Robert W. Meserve | 1972–1973 | Massachusetts | Past president of Boston Bar Assn. | [15] |
97 | Chesterfield Smith | 1973–1974 | Florida | [16] | |
98 | James D. Fellers | 1974–1975 | Oklahoma | ||
99 | Lawrence E. Walsh | 1975–1976 | New York | ||
100 | Justin A. Stanley | 1976–1977 | Illinois | ||
101 | William B. Spann, Jr. | 1977–1978 | Georgia | ||
102 | S. Shepherd Tate | 1978–1979 | Tennessee | ||
103 | Leonard S. Janofsky | 1979–1980 | California | ||
104 | William Reece Smith, Jr. | 1980–1981 | Florida | Investigated Sami Al Arian[17][18] | [16] |
105 | David R. Brink | 1981–1982 | Minnesota | ||
106 | Morris Harrell | 1982–1983 | Texas | Alumnus of Baylor Law School | [19] |
107 | Wallace D. Riley | 1983-1984 | Michigan | ||
108 | John C. Shepherd | 1984-1985 | Missouri | ||
109 | William W. Falsgraf | 1983–1985 | Ohio | [20] | |
110 | Eugene C. Thomas | 1986–1987 | Idaho | ||
111 | Robert MacCrate | 1987–1988 | New York | ||
112 | Robert D. Raven | 1988-1989 | California | ||
113 | L. Stanley Chauvin, Jr. | 1988–1989 | Kentucky | ||
114 | John J. Curtin, Jr. | 1990–1991 | Massachusetts | Past president of Boston Bar Assn. | [21] |
115 | Sandy D'Alemberte | 1991–1992 | Florida | Future president of FSU | [16] |
116 | J. Michael McWilliams | 1992-1993 | Maryland | ||
117 | R. William Ide, III | 1994–1995 | Georgia | [22] | |
118 | George Edward Bushnell Jr. | 1994–1995 | Michigan | [23] | |
119 | Roberta Cooper Ramo | 1995–1996 | New Mexico | First female president Alumna of University of CO, Boulder |
[24] |
120 | N. Lee Cooper | 1996–1997 | Alabama | [25] | |
121 | Jerome J. Shestack | 1997–1998 | Pennsylvania | Former editor of Harvard Law Record Member of IAJLJ |
[26] |
122 | Philip S. Anderson | 1998-1999 | Arkansas | ||
123 | William G. Paul | 1999–2000 | Oklahoma | [27] | |
124 | Martha W. Barnett | 2000–2001 | Florida | [16] | |
125 | Robert Edward Hirshon | 2001–2002 | Michigan | ||
126 | Alfred P. Carlton Jr. | 2002–2003 | North Carolina | ||
127 | Dennis W. Archer | 2003–2004 | Michigan | First African-American president | [27] |
128 | Robert J. Grey, Jr. | 2004–2005 | Virginia | ||
129 | Michael S. Greco | 2005–2006 | Massachusetts | First foreign-born president | |
130 | Karen J. Mathis | 2006–2007 | Pennsylvania | [28] | |
131 | William H. Neukom | 2007–2008 | California | [29] | |
132 | H. Thomas Wells Jr. | 2008–2009 | Alabama | [30] | |
133 | Carolyn B. Lamm | 2009–2010 | District of Columbia | [31] | |
134 | Stephen N. Zack | 2010–2011 | Florida | [32] | |
135 | William T. Robinson III | 2011–2012 | Kentucky | [33] | |
136 | Laurel G. Bellows | 2012–2013 | Illinois | [34] | |
137 | James R. Silkenat | 2013–2014 | New York | [35] | |
138 | William C. Hubbard | 2014–2015 | South Carolina |
References
- Sobel, Robert. Biographical Directory of the United States Executive Branch, 1774-1889. Greenwood Press (1990). ISBN 0-313-26593-3.
Notes and references
- ↑ Johnson, Rossiter. Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, - Vol. I-X (10). The Biographical Society (1904).
- ↑ Sobel, 1990. p. 44
- 1 2 3 "BAMSL Members". Bar Association of Metropolitan St. Louis. Archived from the original on July 18, 2006. Retrieved 2007-12-30.
- ↑ "Tucker, John Randolph". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved 2008-03-07.
- ↑ "Manderson, Charles Frederick". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved 2007-12-30.
- ↑ "Edmund Whetmore, Noted Lawyer, Dies" (PDF). New York Times. 1918-07-09. Retrieved 2007-12-30.
- ↑ TUCKER, Henry St. George, (1853 - 1932)
- ↑ "History of the United States Attorney District of Kansas". United States Department of Justice. Retrieved 2007-12-30.
- ↑ "Alton B. Parker" (PDF). Klyne Esopus Museum. Retrieved 2007-12-30.
- ↑ Frank Moore Colby, Talcott Williams, eds. (1918). The New international encyclopædia 8 (2nd ed.). Dodd, Mead and company. p. 384. Retrieved 2011-04-28.
- ↑ The Letters of Sir William Blackstone (1723-1780) in the Hampton L. Carson Collection of the Free Library of Philadelphia
- ↑ http://www.mlaus.org/archives/library/1327.pdf
- ↑ Lewis F. Powell Jr., Who Became the Quiet Centrist of the Supreme Court, Is Dead at 90
- ↑ "Bernard G. Segal Dies at 89; Lawyer for Rich and Poor". The New York Times. 1997-06-05. Retrieved 2010-05-08.
- ↑ New York Times
- 1 2 3 4 UFLaw Leadership Examples Archived August 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Sami Al-Arian: Victim of Intolerance or Threat to a University's Stability? - The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education - FIRE
- ↑ The Ordeal of Nahla and Sami Al-Arian » Counterpunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names
- ↑ High-Profile Attorneys Positively Impact Dallas Community
- ↑ Shipp, E. R. (1987-02-17). "A.B.A. Rejects Plan On Tobacco Ad Ban". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-05-08.
- ↑ Curtin Center for Public Interest Law Dedicated
- ↑ Rule of Law Initiative Home / Europe & Eurasia (CEELI) 2007-2008 Board Members
- ↑ PRDI Advisers, Directors & Staff
- ↑ Rice Makes Personal Donation For Katrina Relief in Mississippi
- ↑ Members Named to Commission
- ↑ WolfBlock Lawyer to Receive ABA’s Highest Award
- 1 2 Archer elected as first African-American ABA president
- ↑ Karen J. Mathis bio Archived May 14, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ William H. Neukombio Archived August 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ H. Thomas Wells, Jr. bio Archived July 22, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Carolyn B. Lamm bio Archived July 21, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Stephen N. Zack bio Archived September 3, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Wm. T. (Bill) Robinson III bio Archived May 14, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Laurel G. Bellows bio
- ↑ James R. Silkenat Nomination Announcement
- This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
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