TWHM

Texas Women’s History Month: Hortense Ward

March 15, 2011 1:01 pm by: Rebecca McInroy

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Hortense Ward

In 1910, Hortense Ward became the first woman in Texas admitted to the state bar. A former teacher and court reporter, she practiced civil law with her husband but did not appear in court, concerned that her appearance would offend male juries. Active in women’s rights, Ward supported suffrage, a married women’s property law, and the reduction of the work week to 54 hours. She was born near Victoria in 1872, but lived most of her life in Houston.

In 1917, Ward and other suffragists lobbied the Texas Congressional delegation to support the 19th Amendment for woman suffrage. The next year they lobbied Gov. William P. Hobby to support Texas women voting in state primaries. Both efforts succeeded, and Ward’s newspaper articles were instrumental in getting over 380,000 Texas women to register in the summer of 1918.

In 1925, Gov. Pat Neff appointed Hortense Ward the chief justice of an All-Woman Supreme Court. Along with attorneys Ruth Brazzil of Galveston and Hattie Henenberg of Dallas, Ward heard one case involving a fraternal organization with so many members that Gov. Neff could find no male judges without conflicts of interest. Ironically, while Ward and her colleagues could serve as judges, women could not serve on Texas juries until 1954.

Hortense Ward remained politically active and practiced law until 1939. She died in Houston in 1944.

No comments yet.

Add your response

Comments are moderated. They are posted at the discretion of KUT if they stick to the topic and contribute to the conversation. They will not be published if they contain or link to abusive material, personal attacks, profanity or spam.

You must be logged in to post a comment.