WHM Events open to the public: Please register by emailing Women’s History Month
paodar@state.gov:
Film Festival (Schedule)
March 20, 22, 27
Films start from 2:00 p.m.
Evening films begin at 6:00 p.m. and end at 8:00 p.m.
The following will be from 2:00 – 5:00 p.m.
March 21 – Proposal Writing Seminar
March 28 – Fulbright Information Session
March 29 – Fulbright Reflections Series – Jaclyn Hall: Monitoring Ecological Change within Forests
Women's History Month (March 2007)
Sandra Day O'Connor
Also known as: Sandra O'Connor, Sandra D. O'Connor, Sandra Day O' Connor
Occupation: Supreme Court Justice
BIOGRAPHICAL ESSAY
In 1981 Sandra Day O'Connor (born 1930) became the first woman to serve as a justice of the United States Supreme Court.
During
the final month of the 1980 presidential campaign, candidate Ronald
Reagan, whose polls disclosed a lack of support among female voters,
announced that, if elected, he would appoint a woman to the Supreme
Court. In July 1981 President Reagan kept that promise, nominating
Sandra Day O'Connor to become the first female justice in the 191-year
history of the court.
Born on March 26, 1930, Sandra Day spent
her earliest years on her family's Lazy B Ranch in southeastern
Arizona. She was considered a "child of the frontier" as her first home
had no electricity or running water. She grew up branding steer,
learning to fix whatever was broken and absorbing the influence of her
family's vast Arizona cattle ranch built on former Apache land.
Then,
because of parental concern that this obviously bright girl could not
get an adequate education in rural schools, she went to live with her
maternal grandmother in El Paso, Texas. There she attended the private
Radford School for girls and Austin High. In 1946 she enrolled at
Stanford University, where she studied economics and graduated magna cum laude
in 1950. A year before receiving her B.A. she entered the law school,
from which she received an LL.B. in 1952. A member of the board of
editors of the Stanford Law Review, Day graduated third in a class of 102, two places behind her future Supreme Court colleague William H. Rehnquist.
Despite
her outstanding academic record, she failed in efforts to obtain
employment as a lawyer with San Francisco and Los Angeles law firms
because she was a woman. The only one willing to hire the future
justice at all offered her a job as a legal secretary. Instead, she
took a position as a deputy county attorney in San Mateo, California.
When her new husband, John O'Connor, who was one class behind her at
Stanford, finished law school the couple headed for Germany, where he
served as an attorney in the Army, and she worked as a civilian
quartermaster corps attorney, specializing in contracts.
Upon
their return to the United States the O'Connors settled in the Phoenix,
Arizona area. O'Connor and another lawyer opened a law office in
suburban Maryvale, but for the next few years she devoted most of her
time to rearing the three sons who were born between 1957 and 1962. She
also served as a bankruptcy trustee, wrote bar exam questions, set up a
lawyer referral service, served on a county zoning appeal board and a
governor's committee on marriage and the family, did volunteer work
with several civic and charitable organizations, and took an active
role in local Republican politics.
In 1965 O'Connor returned
to full-time employment as one of Arizona's assistant attorneys
general. She remained active in civic affairs, and when the state
senator from her district resigned in 1969 Governor Jack Williams
appointed her to the seat. She won election to it in 1970 and was
easily reelected in 1972. As a state senator O'Connor compiled a
moderate to conservative voting record and sufficiently impressed her
Republican colleagues that in 1972 they chose her as their majority
leader, making her the first woman anywhere in the country to hold that
position.
In 1974 O'Connor left the legislature, running
successfully for a judgeship in the Maricopa County Superior Court.
Although remaining active in Republican politics, she resisted when
party leaders tried to persuade her to challenge Democratic Governor
Bruce Babbitt in 1978. The following year Babbitt appointed her to the
Arizona Court of Appeals. When Reagan selected her for the Supreme
Court she became the first appointee in 24 years with prior service on
a state court and the first in 32 years with legislative experience.
It
was largely because she was the first woman ever nominated that she was
quickly and unanimously confirmed by the Senate. As a justice, her
upbringing was expected to keep her solidly conservative and push her
into the states-rights camp in court decisions. But her inability to
get a job after graduating from law school because she was a woman
influenced her as well, and was a point of contention for right-wing
conservatives who objected to her appointment for fear she would not
oppose abortion.
There was a certain irony in this, for
O'Connor was not part of the organized women's movement. After giving
early support to the Equal Rights Amendment, she had backed away from
it when the opposition of Arizona's two Republican senators became
clear. Although the Moral Majority complained that O'Connor was a
proponent of abortion, she had cast votes against as well as for it in
the legislature. As a justice she aligned herself with its opponents.
Although
not a militant feminist, O'Connor was a founder of both the Arizona
Women Lawyers Association and the National Association of Women Judges
and had fought to eliminate provisions discriminating against women
from her state's bar rules and community property laws. On the Court
she quickly established a reputation as a judicial opponent of sex
discrimination. Her most famous early opinion was Mississippi University for Women v. Hogan (1982), in which the Court held it was unconstitutional for a state nursing school to refuse to admit men.
On
other issues Justice O'Connor generally aligned herself with the
Court's two most conservative members, Chief Justice Warren Burger and
Associate Justice Rehnquist. Exhibiting a strong commitment to law and
order, she consistently voted against criminal defendants. However, her
response to First Amendment claims were lukewarm at best. As her
background on the state bench and an article she had written at about
the time of her appointment suggested, she opposed further extensions
of federal court jurisdiction. Although part of a conservative bloc on
most issues, she did break with it occasionally, as on freedom of
information matters. Despite his own far more liberal voting record,
Justice Harry Blackman quickly concluded O'Connor was a "fine justice,
able and articulate."
During her years following her
appointment by Reagan in 1981, O'Connor followed a pattern that has
sometimes confounded presidents attempting to solidify political
leanings in the Supreme Court. By 1990, following her first decade on
the court she, along with fellow Justice Anthony Kennedy, had become an
unpredictable swing vote, her opinions courted by both sides in many
decisions.
As the 1990s unfolded, O'Connor was influential or
determined the direction of a number of key freedom rulings by the
Supreme Court. They included an interpretation of Freedom of Speech,
censorship, a ruling governing the Internet and cases dealing with
freedom of religion where she was instrumental in striking down a
state-mandated moment of silence in public schools.
She
influenced the court's direction in cases involving discrimination and
harassment because of gender, strengthening women's job opportunity
rights. However, she was the swing vote in a decision that narrowed the
scope of affirmative action in Adarand v. Pena. And, in 1995, she sided with conservative justices in cases, particularly Miller v. Johnson, that weakened the Voting Rights Act's congressional district apportionment designed to favor minority representation.
She voted with the majority to strike down the core of the federal Brady Act
In a 1992 challenge to abortion rights, Planned Parenthood v. Casey, O'Connor was one of the majority who voted to uphold the provisions of Roe v. Wade
that made abortion legal for women. In 1997, she ruled against another
privacy issue: A terminally ill patient's right to die through
physician-assisted suicide.
In a U.S. News & World Report
story, "The Geography of Justice: Big Decisions by the Supreme Court
Turn on the Regional Backgrounds of the Justices," (July, 1997), a
former law clerk hinted at the basis for many of O'Connor's decisions.
According to the clerk, the justice showed a "great admiration for
individual initiative and people taking responsibility for their own
actions...." That tendency to discount a need for special protections
was called the basis of her voting against every race-based affirmative
action issue that came before her.
Throughout many issues
before the court, O'Connor stayed true to her roots, joining her fellow
conservatives in 123 of 137 decisions by 1997. Although her decisions
have not always been popular with feminists, she has served as an
excellent role model to women in general. The justice herself became a
news item in 1997 when a suspicious-looking package found on her
doorstep was suspected of being a bomb. An investigation showed it only
contained a pair of tennis shoes the justice had ordered.
In 2002, the book Lazy B: Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the American Southwest
was published. It was written by O'Connor and her brother, H. Alan Day.
Also in 2002, O'Connor was inducted into the National Cowgirl Hall of
Fame as it opened its new museum and hall facilities.
anti-gun legislation requiring background checks of prospective gun purchasers.
UPDATES
March 8, 2004: O'Connor received the Elliot Richardson Public Service Prize from the Council for Excellence in Government. Source: US Newswire, http://releases.usnewswire.com/GetRelease.asp?id=104-03052004, March 5, 2004.
July 22, 2004: O'Connor,
speaking at the annual conference of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Monterey, California, said she was "disgusted" by a 5-4
Supreme Court decision that cast doubt on federal sentencing
guidelines. Source: CNN.com, http://www.cnn.com/2004/LAW/07/22/oconnor.sentences.ap/index.html, July 23, 2004.
July 1, 2005: O'Connor
announced that she will retire. It will occur either before the start
of the Supreme Court's next term or whenever the Senate confirms her
successor. Source: CNN.com, www.cnn.com, July 1, 2005.
September 13, 2005: O'Connor's children's book, Chico, illustrated by Dan Andreasen, was published by Penguin. Source: New York Times, www.nytimes.com, September 13, 2005.
October 11, 2006: O'Connor heard cases for one day on the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York. Source: Associated
Press,
October 22, 2006: O'Connor was listed among "America's Best Leaders" by U.S. News & World Report and the Center for Public Leadership at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government. Source: U.S. News & World Report, http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/061022/30bloomberg.htm, October 30, 2006.
SOURCE CITATION
Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. 17 Vols. Gale Research, 1998.


