- by foxnews
- 24 Nov 2024
Here is a look at the life of Sandra Day O'Connor, the first female justice on the United States Supreme Court.
Birth date: March 26, 1930
Birth place: El Paso, Texas
Birth name: Sandra Day
Father: Harry A. Day, rancher
Mother: Ada Mae (Wilkey) Day, rancher
Marriage: John Jay O'Connor III (1952-2009, his death)
Children: Scott, Brian and Jay
Education: Stanford University, B.A. in Economics, 1950, graduated magna cum laude; Stanford Law School, LL.B, 1952
In law school, she was on the Stanford Law Review and third in her class.
Completed law school in two years.
A proponent of judicial restraint. At her confirmation hearings, she said, "Judges are not only not authorized to engage in executive or legislative functions, they are also ill-equipped to do so."
In retirement, O'Connor has campaigned around the United States to abolish elections for judges, believing that a merit system leads to a more qualified and untainted judiciary.
1952-1953 - County deputy attorney in San Mateo, California.
1955-1957- Works as a civilian lawyer for the Quartermaster Corps in Germany, while her husband serves with the Army's Judge Advocate General Corps.
1959 - Opens a law firm in Maryvale, Arizona.
1965-1969 - Assistant attorney general of Arizona.
1969 - Appointed to fill a vacant seat in the Arizona Senate.
1970 - Elected to the Arizona Senate.
1972 - Reelected to the Arizona Senate and elected majority leader. She is the first woman to hold this office in any state.
1975-1979 - Superior Court judge of Maricopa County.
1979-1981 - Judge of the Arizona Court of Appeals.
August 19, 1981 - Formally nominated to the Supreme Court by President Ronald Reagan, to fill the seat of retiring Justice Potter Stewart.
September 21, 1981 - Confirmed by the US Senate.
September 25, 1981 - Sworn in as the first female Supreme Court justice of the United States.
1982 - Writes an opinion invalidating a women-only enrollment policy at a Mississippi State nursing school because it "tends to perpetuate the stereotyped view of nursing as an exclusively women's job." Mississippi University for Women, et al., v. Hogan
October 21, 1988 - Has surgery for breast cancer after being diagnosed earlier in the year.
1996 - Writes the majority opinion in a 5-4 decision to restrict affirmative action policies and voting districts that are created to boost the political power of minorities. Shaw v. Reno
1999 - Writes the majority ruling opinion in a 5-4 decision that public school districts that receive federal funds can be held liable when they are "deliberately indifferent" to the sexual harassment of one student by another. Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education
2000 - Votes with the majority in a 5-4 decision that strikes down state laws banning the medical procedure that critics call "partial-birth" abortion. Stenberg v. Carhart
December 2000 - Votes in the majority to end the recount in Florida which leads to George W. Bush becoming president of the United States. O'Connor and Anthony M. Kennedy are the only justices who do not attach their names to either a concurring or dissenting opinion in the case. Bush v. Gore
January 31, 2006 - Retires from the Supreme Court.
2008 - Develops the website, OurCourts which later becomes iCivics, a free program for students to learn about civics.
July 30, 2009 - Is awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama.
February 25, 2014 - Her book "Out Of Order," which is based on the history of the Supreme Court, is published.
October 23, 2018 - Writes a letter revealing that she has been diagnosed with the "beginning stages of dementia, probably Alzheimer's disease."
March 19, 2019 - The biography, "First: Sandra Day O'Connor," is published.
July 19, 2019 - O'Connor's former home is listed by the National Park Service in the National Register of Historic Places. The adobe house built by O'Connor and her husband in 1958 in Paradise Valley, Arizona, was relocated to Tempe, Arizona, in 2009. It is the home of the Sandra Day O'Connor Institute.
April 13, 2022 - President Joe Biden signs a bipartisan bill into law to erect statues of O'Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the grounds of the US Capitol. The legislation stipulates that the statues should be placed within two years of its enactment.
The 2025 Jubilee will bring tourists to the Vatican, Rome and Italy to celebrate the Catholic tradition of patrons asking for forgiveness of sins. Hope will be a central theme.
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