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riesenfeldcenter · 13 days
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An all-woman courtroom!
We recently framed this wonderful watercolor done by Twin Cities courtroom sketch artist, Nancy Muellner. This piece was commissioned for our 2019 exhibit, Women in the Law and felt perfect to share this month.
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riesenfeldcenter · 24 days
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Happy Women's History Month! To kick off March, here is a photo from our archives of the first three women to graduate from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1893. Flora, pictured on the right, was the first woman to begin classes at the law school in 1890.
Left to right: Marie A. McDermott, Nora L. Morton, Flora E. Matteson
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riesenfeldcenter · 1 month
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In honor of Black History Month, we'd like to share our copy of Let Me Live (1937), by Angelo Herndon.
Angelo Herndon (1913-1997) was a coal miner and labor organizer who worked across racial lines. After an attempt to organize black and white industrial workers in Atlanta in 1932, Herndon was arrested and convicted of insurrection. The prosecution case pointed to his possession of communist literature (all of which could be found at a public library), which were found in his hotel room.
Herndon was eventually sentenced to 18 to 20 years of hard labor, but his conviction was overturned by the state appeals court and he was released on bail. On April 26th, 1937, a narrow majority of the Supreme Court ruled in his favor, ruling Georgia's insurrection statute as unconstitutional.
Let Me Live, Herndon's autobiography written during his time in prison, tells the story of his arrest and times in court but also describes his early life up until that point.
This first edition copy features an inscription from Herndon to Thomas Mooney, a noted political activist and labor leader who was controversially imprisoned. When Herndon was out on bail awaiting appeals, he visited Mooney in prison and conducted an interview, which was published in Labor Defender in January, 1935.
To view more about this book and other materials to celebrate Black History Month, visit our digital exhibit, Law and the Struggle for Racial Justice.
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riesenfeldcenter · 2 months
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One of the items featured at our open house this week was this manuscript with a copy of the death sentence from an 1828 murder case. Richard Johnson was one of the last two people publicly executed in New York, alongside Catherine Cashiere, on May 9th, 1829.
This manuscript includes a couple extracts: a stanza from Gray's "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard," paraphrases of Mark 9:48 and Revelation 18:19, and part of Book I of Robert Pollok's The Course of Time, which summarizes the damnation sections of the Book of Revelation.
Probably our favorite part, however, is a recipe for "Potatoe Pudding," scrawled upside down at the bottom of the first page.
The pamphlet image included was found here.
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riesenfeldcenter · 2 months
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Some woodcuts for you from our 1541 Lazare de Baïf text, Annotationes in legem II De captiuis & postliminio reuersis. While he discusses the rights of captured soldiers and their later return to freedom, he gets a bit distracted by a reference to ships and explores Greek and Roman naval ships for most of the book.
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riesenfeldcenter · 2 months
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A peek at our aisle of Roman and Canon law books. Lots of hand-drawn flowers and swirly designs adorn these spines. I'm not sure why flowers were often the go-to, but I'd love to know.
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riesenfeldcenter · 3 months
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The tiniest book in our collection! This miniature printing of The Inaugural Address of John F. Kennedy is 2"x 2 3/4" and quite literally fits in the palm of your hand.
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riesenfeldcenter · 3 months
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Some unexpected marbling on two books (here and here) covering the trial of Lord Sackville, 1760.
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riesenfeldcenter · 3 months
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Dreaming of snow today in this unseasonably warm Minnesota winter. ❄️ As we quickly approach winter break here at UMN law, it's a perfect time to look through some photos of snow and trees in the archives!
Top to bottom:
1977: The law library's office assistant and a student employee decorate a small tree in the empty reading room in Fraser Hall.
1986: Students wait for the bus near Mondale Hall during a March snowfall.
1981: Snow covered cars in the Mondale parking lot.
1977: Topping off the new law school building with an evergreen tree.
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riesenfeldcenter · 3 months
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Move over, Will Shortz! Helen Spink Henton, a student at the law school in the 1920s, left all sorts of things tucked inside the pages of her notebooks. Evidently, she was a big fan of crosswords, or maybe she just enjoyed doodling during long lectures.
These notes come from one of Helen's notebooks from the 1924-1925 academic year, and are part of our larger collection of student notebooks.
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riesenfeldcenter · 4 months
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Noah Webster's first dictionary (and the first American dictionary!), A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language, published in 1806.
"No person acquainted with the difficulties attending such a compilation, will flatter himself or the public, that any thing like perfection is within the compass of one man's abilities. Nothing like this is here promised. All that I have attempted, and all that I can believe to be executed, is a dictionary with considerable improvements; a work required by the advanced and advancing state of science and arts. The dictionaries of a living language must be revised every half century, or must necessarily be erroneous and imperfect."
Not only does Webster go from A to Z, but he includes a chronological table of events events going from Adam and Eve to 1806. If you look closely enough, you can find out when and where Henry II first wore silk stockings.
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riesenfeldcenter · 4 months
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On this day 151 years ago, 17-year-old George Tutin, an English law student, was feeling sick and stayed in bed until 10am.
We've been thoroughly enjoying paging through this newly acquired 1872 diary, which is completely filled out and contains a lot of observations about the weather. More interestingly, it also notes what he was up to academically and personally. Tutin took a lot of walks, spent most afternoons studying, translated and read Virgil, kept up with international affairs, trimmed sheep, and unfortunately seems to have gotten a lot of colds.
November 29, 1872
Being poorly I did not go to Thirsk but enjoyed the more inviting delights of bed till 10 o'clock.
February 26, 1872
A dull wet day, I got my watch-glass broken yesterday so I send it to get mended at Ripon by the postman.
June 18, 1872
Rather fine in the morning. In the afternoon a most terrible thunder storm took place as big as marble falling. We consequently did not get to Ripon Flower Show. Papa out in the evening after the storm. The Lords have made a mess of the Ballot Bill.
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riesenfeldcenter · 4 months
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Happy Thanksgiving! Since everyone loved the initials from our recent post so much, here's an assortment (mostly) from our great collection of English law.
We're grateful for...kings? Unfortunately we couldn't find a decorated "K," but this image from a King's proclamation will have to do.
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riesenfeldcenter · 4 months
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In a 1949 student survey, these two law students weren't shy about sharing their goals of putting dinner on the table. One answer might be a bit snarkier than the other though.
If you do not intend to practice law what do you intend to do?
STARVE
When you entered law school did you intend to practice law? If you did and do not now, why the change?
I like to eat three times daily and if I can't do it by practicing law, then I'll have to find a job that will do it.
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riesenfeldcenter · 5 months
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A mixed bag of letters and animals (featuring a couple of dragons!) from a beautiful 1525 book of Canon law. Someone please make these decorated initials into Bananagrams tiles.
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riesenfeldcenter · 5 months
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Happy Halloween! 🎃
This frontispiece might give you some last minute costume inspiration, especially if you have an eyepatch on hand. Charles Price, a man with many identities (one being "Old Patch"), was a prolific English forger and swindler in the 18th century.
Come see this book and other spooky treasures from our collection at our Halloween open house tomorrow, from 12-3pm!
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riesenfeldcenter · 5 months
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"Hopefully, he waited for the book to become agitated, but nothing stirred it."
Maybe Claude Noble should have tried to call on Clarence Darrow's spirit a bit closer to Halloween (or waited more than 30 seconds for a breeze).
I stumbled upon this photo, taken in 1940, in our Clarence Darrow collection and had to do a bit of digging. Turns out books are hard to agitate, and Noble tried many times to call on the famous lawyer on the anniversary of his death (this article was published five years after the above photo was taken).
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