Briscoe and Betsy-B
After she began practicing law, Shirley and Seymour bought their first home in Madison. They also got two Irish Setters: Briscoe and Betsy-B.
After she began practicing law, Shirley and Seymour bought their first home in Madison. They also got two Irish Setters: Briscoe and Betsy-B.
At the LaFollette firm, Shirley ultimately decides to focus her practice on tax law. She went on to teach tax law at the University of Wisconsin Law School.
When Shirley joined the LaFollette firm, she decided to try several areas of law, including trial and appellate litigation. She also argued two cases in the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
When the law firm LaFollette, Sinykin, Doyle & Anderson hired Shirley as a lawyer in 1962, the Wisconsin State Journal ran a big story hailing her as “the epitome of a modern career woman.”
On July 17, 1962, Shirley was admitted to the Wisconsin bar and signed the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s roll of attorneys. At last, she could begin practicing law.
Shirley finished her doctorate on the history of Wisconsin’s dairy industry in 1962
Shirley studied with Willard Hurst, the founder of the modern field of American legal history, at the University of Wisconsin Law School.
When they arrived at the University of Wisconsin, Seymour did a year of postdoctoral work in the Zoology Department.
After Shirley graduated from law school, she and Seymour headed to the University of Wisconsin. There, she started her doctorate in American legal history.
Shirley graduated valedictorian of Indiana University’s law school class of 1956. The dean told her that the top Indianapolis law firms would not hire her as a lawyer because she was woman.