On March 3, 1879, Belva Lockwood became the first woman admitted to the Bar of the Supreme Court. The following year, she became the first woman to argue a case
before the Justices. In the 19th century, women struggled against professional and societal barriers that largely prevented them from working in the legal field.
In a small number of documented cases, women argued before colonial courts in the 17th and 18th centuries, but such instances were rare. East Coast law schools and
state bars resisted the growing tide of women who wanted to enter the legal profession. It was not until the 1840s, during westward expansion of the country, that
women began to qualify by “reading law” and providing legal services at the city and county levels, even without formal admission to a state or territorial
bar. By the turn of the century, a community of women lawyers was established and growing.
In 1981, just over a century after Lockwood’s inaugural argument, Sandra Day O’Connor took her seat on the Bench as the first woman on the Supreme Court of
the United States. Reflecting on the women who went before her, and those who would follow her, she later observed: “As women achieve power, the barriers will fall.
As society sees what women can do, as women see what women can do, there will be more women out there doing things, and we’ll all be better off for it.”