Emilie Bullowa

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Emilie Bullowa
Born
Emilie Moritz Bullowa

1869 (1869)
Died (aged 73)
New York City, U.S.
OccupationLawyer
Years active1900–1941

Emilie Moritz Bullowa (1869 – October 25, 1942) was an American lawyer. She was the first president of the

New York Medical College and Hospital for Women
and was its president from 1921 to 1942.

Early life and education

Emilie Moritz Bullowa was born in New York in 1869, the eldest of six children of Mary (née Grunhut) and Morris Bullowa.[1] Her father was a merchant from Lubenec, Czechoslovakia. She attended public school in New York and received private lessons in art, music, and languages. She attended Normal College (now Hunter College). Her parents died sometime before she reached the age of 20 and she cared for her siblings.[2]

She was a member of Kappa Beta Pi,[3] earned a law degree from New York University's Law College in 1900.[2]

Legal career

Bullowa was admitted to the bar and opened the law firm Bullowa and Bullowa on Nassau Street in lower Manhattan[4] with her brother Ferdinand (d. 1919) in 1900. They specialized in admiralty law and among their clients were foreign shipping lines. Bullowa became an accomplished trial lawyer and "established a new point" in libel law in 1919.[2]

Bullowa advocated for equality for women in property rights. Sometime before 1910, while she was legislative chair of the New York State Federation, she said that she was "unable to find a single unimportant inequality in the New York laws governing the property rights of women".

Women's City Club in New York.[6]

Bullowa was president of the Women Lawyers Association of New York City from 1916 until 1922. In 1922, she was a founding member and the first president of the National Association of Women Lawyers.[2] She served as president from 1920 to 1924.[7] While she served as president the association held its first national conference in Minneapolis in July 1923.[8]

She chaired various

New York Medical College and Hospital for Women and was its president from 1921 to 1942.[2]

Bullowa fought for equal standing for women lawyers[4] and was a member of the Women's Democratic Union platform committee in 1924.[4] She attended a meeting of the British and American Bars in England in 1924 where she met the lawyer Maud Crofts.[9]

Later life and philanthropy

During her career, Bullowa advocated for legal aid, saying "our democracy doesn't work if the people who can't afford to give compensation for legal aid can't get justice. It is just as important to help people in their rights as in their health and their housing." She also offered her services pro bono to clients in need.[10][4]

After World War I, she donated a French chateau she had inherited to the French War Relief. She adopted several French children orphaned during the war. She later adopted orphaned British children during World War II and gifted a mobile kitchen unit to the British War Relief Society.[2]

Bullowa practiced law until her retirement in 1941.[2] She donated around 2,000 legal volumes that had belonged to her brother to The Legal Aid Society's Criminal Courts branch legal library.[2]

Bullowa died in New York on October 25, 1942. She was 73.[4] She was affiliated with New York's Central Synagogue[2] and served on the Board of Trustees of the Jewish Institute of Religion.[11]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Emilie Bullowa, Lawyer 42 Years". The New York Times. October 26, 1942. p. 15.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Appel, Tamar Kaplan (December 31, 1999). "Emilie M. Bullowa". Jewish Women's Archive. Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women. Retrieved July 10, 2023.
  3. ^ Pike, Katharine R. (1930). "The National Association of Women Lawyers". Women Lawyers' Journal. 18: 14-15.
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ Dorr, Rheta Childe (1910). "American Women and the Common Law". What Eight Million Women Want. p. 103.
  6. ^ "Women's City Club at Tea". New York Tribune. April 28, 1921. p. 13.
  7. ^ "NAWL History". National Association of Women Lawyers. Retrieved July 10, 2023.
  8. ^ Joyce, A. Florence (August 1942). "How We Started - N. A. W. L. History Chapter III". Women Lawyers' Journal. 28 (3 & 4): 23.
  9. ^ "British-American Bar Meeting". Women Lawyers' Journal. 13 (4): 13. October 1, 1924.
  10. .
  11. ^ American Jewish Year Book (PDF). American Jewish Committee. 1928. p. 216.