CELEBRATING A CENTURY OF WOMEN IN LAW
BARONESS BRENDA HALE
Celebrating a Century of Women in Law Speech from the opening of the exhibition, Celebrating a Century of Women in Law, on Thursday 3 October 2019 Baroness Hale served as the first ever woman President of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom from 2017 to 2020, and serves as a member of the House of Lords as a Lord Temporal. A Bencher of Gray’s Inn, away from the Bench she maintains her contact with academia through a variety of high level posts.
The Middle Temple, and Master Rosalind Wright in particular, are to be congratulated on having put together this marvellous collection of photographic portraits of the women of the Inn. It is invidious to single out any individuals when all are so worthy of our respect and admiration. But I am going to pick out a few to illustrate the diversity of their backgrounds and achievements.
Helena Normanton The first woman to be admitted to any of the Inns of Court. She applied on Tuesday 23 December 1919, the day the Sex Discrimination (Removal) Act received Royal Assent, and was admitted the next day. She took Silk in 1949, along with Rose Heilbron of Gray’s Inn, the first two English women to do so. She had to contend with some quite extraordinary misogyny. She was described as: A warhorse from the old feminist days and the terror of her male colleagues… a comic character quite without fear, and physically unattractive. She can only be described as large and blowsy… incredibly common not to say vulgar… a menace to the movement for she was always trying to organise the women into forming separate groups from the men.
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Sybil Campbell
Dawn Oliver
The first woman to become a salaried judicial office holder, being appointed a Metropolitan Stipendiary Magistrate in 1945. She was not universally popular. Perhaps it was her wartime experience policing the black market in food that led her to impose unusually heavy sentences on petty pilferers from the London docks, which were in her area. There was even a workers’ march against her. But she survived, was an enthusiastic supporter of the new concept of probation when it was introduced and continued to sit until her retirement.
The first woman and the first career academic to be appointed Treasurer of Middle Temple. Like me, she practised in her early years but then became an academic lawyer. She eventually specialised in constitutional and administrative law, but, again like me, she spent some time among the family lawyers – we first met at the International Society on Family Law conference in Uppsala, Sweden, in 1979, discussing marriage and cohabitation in contemporary societies.
Margaret Booth The third woman High Court Judge after Elizabeth Lane (Inner Temple) and Rose Heilbron (Gray’s Inn). Like them, she was assigned to the Family Division. But, unlike them, she was a family law specialist. She was a great family judge and a great role model for me when I was learning to do the job. She inherited the beautiful judicial robes which had been made for Elizabeth Lane, using the best Russian ermine, and passed on to me when I filled the vacancy created by her retirement. I passed them on to Jill Black. So, they have had four careful lady owners and are now displayed in the judicial costume gallery in the Royal Courts of Justice.
2020 Middle Templar
Pat Scotland The first black woman QC. I saw a good deal of her when I was a Judge in the Family Division. She was an immaculate advocate in every way – in preparation, in presentation and in appearance. She was a great loss to the law – and I would guess the judiciary – when she decided to go into politics as a Labour member of the House of Lords. But she had a distinguished ministerial career. She was also the first woman and the first BAME Attorney General. And she is now the first woman Secretary General of Commonwealth.