Black History at Ļć½¶Šć Law School
A renowned scholar, a cherished mentor to generations of students, and an influential member of the greater Boston legal community, Ruth-Arlene W. Howe J.D. ā74 arrived at Boston College Law School in 1970 as one of its very few female African American students.Ā Twenty-seven years later, she became the first Black woman to earn tenure and the rank of full professor in the schoolās history.
Her story, along with those of many past and recent Black Ļć½¶Šć Law graduates are told on the schoolās new website, āBlack History at Ļć½¶Šć Law.ā Launched in April to honor, document, and celebrate the rich history of contributions from Black Ļć½¶Šć Law community members as student leaders, educators, academics, judges, activists, litigators, transactional attorneys, and visionaries, the site precedes this yearās historic graduation of the schoolās largest class of 40 Black students.
āThis was such an ambitious and important project,ā said Odette Lienau, the Marianne D. Short, Esq., Dean of Ļć½¶Šć Law. āMuch of our Black alumniās history was comprised within Ruth-Arlene Howeās own materials and her memory. We wanted to help preserve the archives and celebrate the many accomplishments of our Black community.
āAs we prepare to graduate the largest class of Black students ever, this year seemed to be a particularly appropriate time to do so.ā
The site features 10 videotaped interviews with Black Ļć½¶Šć Law graduates, conducted in fall 2023, that chronicle the speakersā thoughts on Howeās legacy, their own experiences as Black law students and alumni, and what the Black Law Students Association (BLSA) and the Black Alumni Network (BAN) meant to them.
āThis is the opportunity to ensure that this history, that Iāve been part of, is available for people in the future, because what we hope that has been put in place is a firm foundation,ā said Howe, a BAN co-founder who retired from active teaching duties in 2009 and is now a professor emerita. Her private papers will be permanently archived at the University.
Ā āBlack History at Ļć½¶Šć Lawā includes such compelling stories as that of legal pioneer Harold A. Stevens J.D.ā36.Ā The first African American graduate of Ļć½¶Šć Law was also the first African American judge to sit on the New York State Court of Appeals in its 177-year history. Motivated by the lynching of a Black woman and her brothers in his South Carolina hometown, Stevens was determined to study law and use the legal system to eliminate racial injustice.Ā He enrolled at Ļć½¶Šć Law in 1933 after the University of South Carolina rejected him due to its segregationist policies.
The āBlack History at Ļć½¶Šć Lawā project was a year in the making, noted Nate Kenyon, director of marketing and communications and senior advisor to the dean at Ļć½¶Šć Law.
āBLSA and BAN had been advocating for support around archiving their organizational histories for some time,ā he said. āShortly after she arrived, Dean Lienau formed a team of researchers, administrators, and videographers to tackle the project. The group came up with an ambitious proposal: The first part centered on a video featuring Ruth-Arlene Howe; the second part was the creation of a website dedicated to Black history at the school.ā
The team formed an advisory group of BLSA and BAN members, reviewed school archives, visited Howe at her Utah home to scan documents, recorded oral histories, interviewed Black students and alumni, gathered photos, and developed site content. Ā
Howeās video was introduced in the fall of 2023, followed by the gradual release of nine other extended interviews with Black alumni and students. The collection includes a detailed history, timeline, additional videos and photos, alumni profiles, articles from the Ļć½¶Šć Law Magazine and Alledgerāa Ļć½¶Šć Law student newspaper that was published from 1981 to the mid-1990sāand more.
āAlumni are thrilled to see this commitment from the institution, and current students are excited,ā said Assistant Dean for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Lisa Brathwaite, who collaborated with Kenyon, administrators, students, and members of the Black Alumni Board. āIt gives a home and visibility to the Black experience at Ļć½¶Šć Law, and the rich traditions and foundations current members are continuing to build on. Personally, I am delighted and grateful to play a role in preserving and celebrating this history, particularly as we look ahead to the schoolās centennial in 2029.ā
Brathwaite noted that the school is actively seeking alumni participation to update the present information.
āWeāre eager to receive more photos and additional material for the timeline. We truly want this site to be as reflective as possible of the breadth of experience, the strength of community, and the diversity of career trajectories that this community brings to the legal profession,ā she said.
āIām very grateful for the hard work of the Ļć½¶Šć Law team and advisory group in pulling all this impressive content together and making it accessible to all,ā said Lineau.