Women in Law

Women’s Museum of California
Liberty Station
San Diego
October 14, 2018

We visited the exhibition on Women in Law at the Women’s Museum of California in Liberty Station, and we learned a great deal we had not known before about the history of women in the legal profession in the United States.

We read about 19th century pioneers like Arabella Mansfield in Iowa (admitted to the bar after Iowa amended the state constitution in 1869 to drop its male gender restriction) and Clara Foltz in California (admitted in 1878). Not only did women face legal barriers to earning their law licenses, even after admitted to the bar they struggled to build practices. The 19th century attitude toward women in the legal profession was exemplified by this quote by Chief Justice C. J. Ryan of the Wisconsin Supreme Court displayed near the entrance:

Nature has tempered women as little for the judicial conflicts of the courtroom as for the physical conflicts of the battlefield. Our profession has essentially to do with all that is selfish and extortionate, knavish and criminal, coarse and brutal, repulsive and obscene in human life. It would be revolting to all female sense of innocence and the sanctity of their sex.

(Ryan made this statement in opposition to admitting Lavinia Goodell to the bar in 1895.)

Closer to our own time, we read that:

  • Only in the 1970’s did the percentage of women in law schools and legal practice exceed the single digits;
  • 80% of women practicing law in 1988 entered the profession after 1980; and
  • An ABA survey conducted in 1983 revealed that 65% of male attorneys had no female colleagues.

That is the context in which Meredith entered the legal profession. She started law school at the University of San Diego in 1983 and was admitted to the California bar in 1987. When she worked as a law clerk at the San Diego office of a major national law firm in 1985, all of the attorneys in that office – more than 65 total – were men.

The museum was running a video on a loop, with short segments featuring women in the legal profession, both current attorneys and retired. Meredith was particularly interested in the video excerpt and papers on display regarding Madge Bradley, the first female judge on the bench in San Diego County. Bradley was appointed to the bench in 1953. Years ago Meredith heard then-retired Judge Bradley give a riveting talk at a luncheon sponsored by Lawyers Club, the local feminist bar association. Judge Bradley reminisced about what law practice was like in the 1940’s and 50’s, when all the lawyers in the county knew one another and there were only about half a dozen women practicing law. During World War II, she remembered, people were supposed to ask themselves before driving anywhere, “Is this trip necessary?” Bradley handled divorces at a time when, as she put it, “you needed grounds for divorce,” and said that mental cruelty was her preferred ground because “mental cruelty, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder.” A portrait of Madge Bradley was hanging as part of the exhibition.

The Women in Law exhibition will close very soon, on October 28.

We also looked through the museum’s permanent exhibit, on the women’s suffrage movement. We have seen it on prior visits to the museum, but this time noticed new artifacts on display.

General admission to the Women’s Museum is $5; students and seniors over 55 are $3; military and children under 12 are free. The museum is open Wednesday through Sunday, 12 noon to 4:00 p.m. Parking is free, and the museum is wheelchair accessible.

We had headed to the museum after church and stopped to enjoy a brunch at the Fig Tree Café before heading over to the museum. The food and service were excellent. Several other Boston fans greeted us, as we walked around Liberty Station in our Red Sox ballcaps. Go Sox!

Cuyamaca Gold

Cuyamaca Rancho State Park
Stonewall Peak and Mine Museum
Between Descanso and Julian
October 7, 2018

We went hiking with some of Meredith’s rowing teammates in the Cuyamaca mountains. The group met and parked at the Paso Pichaco campground, then climbed up the west side of Stonewall Peak. We walked down the east side of the mountain and around a loop, coming back on the Cold Stream Trail, which runs parallel to State Route 79. The hike took us about 3 hours. The views from the heights were spectacular, and our geologist friend Beth explained the rock formations we saw.

After the hike a few of the younger hikers headed off to Nickel Beer Company in Julian to rehydrate themselves. The more studious of us, including the geologist, drove a short distance north to the site of the former Stonewall gold mine. The entrance to the mineshaft is visible, along with some rusting machinery, all behind a chain link fence. We visited the small museum, which displays historical photos and explains the history of the mine. It was one of several gold mines in the Julian area. It first opened in the 1870’s and operated, off and on, until the early 20th century. In 1926, just before a planned inspection of the timbers, the main shaft collapsed. Fortunately for the would-be inspectors, they had stopped to eat supper before entering the mine. More information about the history of the mine can be seen here.

Our two groups reconvened at Granny’s Kitchen in Julian for a late lunch. The food was great; this is definitely a place to remember for our next trip to Julian.

Both the hiking trails and the mine museum are within the Cuyamaca Rancho State Park, and visitors must display a pass to park in the lots at the campground and at the museum. Day passes cost $10 per vehicle. Free road parking may (or may not) be available, for those willing to hike in from route 79.