File #: Res 0739-2007    Version: * Name: Highlight and honor the life and achievements of Judge Jane Bolin.
Type: Resolution Status: Filed
Committee: Committee on Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Intergroup Relations
On agenda: 3/14/2007
Enactment date: Law number:
Title: Resolution calling for the Council of the City of New York to highlight and honor the life and achievements of Judge Jane Bolin.
Sponsors: Leroy G. Comrie, Jr., Lewis A. Fidler, Sara M. Gonzalez, Michael C. Nelson, Larry B. Seabrook, David I. Weprin
Council Member Sponsors: 6
Date Ver.Prime SponsorAction ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsMultimedia
12/31/2009*Leroy G. Comrie, Jr. City Council Filed (End of Session)  Action details Meeting details Not available
3/14/2007*Leroy G. Comrie, Jr. City Council Referred to Comm by Council  Action details Meeting details Not available
3/14/2007*Leroy G. Comrie, Jr. City Council Introduced by Council  Action details Meeting details Not available

Res. No. 739

 

Resolution calling for the Council of the City of New York to highlight and honor the life and achievements of Judge Jane Bolin.

 

By Council Members Comrie, Fidler, Gonzalez, Nelson, Seabrook and Weprin

 

                     Whereas, Judge Jane Bolin, first black woman in the United States to become a judge, died on January 8, 2007, at the age of ninety-eight; and

                     Whereas, Although initially discouraged to pursue a career in law by a Wellesley College guidance counselor and her father, Gaius C. Bolin, who had his own legal practice and was president of the Dutchess County Bar Association, she graduated from Wellesley College and was named a Wellesley Scholar in 1928, became the first black woman to graduate from Yale Law School and was the first to join the New York City Bar Association; and

                     Whereas, After graduating from Yale, she practiced for a short time with her father in Poughkeepsie, and in 1937, applied for a position in the New York City corporation counsel’s office, subsequently was assigned to the Domestic Relations Court, and became the first black woman to work in the city’s legal department; and

                     Whereas, On July 22, 1939, was sworn in as a family court judge by Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia, in a ceremony that took place at the New York City building at the 1939 World’s Fair; and

                     Whereas, As a family court judge, her cases included homicides and crimes committed by juveniles, neglected children, adoptions, battered spouses, and paternity suits, which, in turn, led to some of her many transcendant achievements such as ending the assignment of probation officers on the basis of race and the placement of children in child-care agencies on the basis of ethnic background; and

                     Whereas, Judge Bolin was reappointed to ten year terms by Mayors William O’Dwyer, Robert F. Wagner Jr., and John V. Lindsay; and

                     Whereas, In January 1979, Judge Bolin reached the mandatory retirement age of seventy, and reluctantly retired after forty years as a judge; and

                     Whereas, After retirement, she remained active in the community as a volunteer reading instructor in New York City public schools for two years, and was appointed to the Regents Review Committee of the New York State Board of Regents; and

                     Whereas, Judge Bolin was outspoken on civil rights issues and her broad sympathy for human suffering will be long remembered; now, therefore, be it

                     Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York honors the life and achievements of Judge Jane Bolin.

 

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