Eloise B. Cushing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BornOctober 29, 1887
DiedOakland, California, U.S.
July 6, 1977 (aged 89)
Almamater
Occupations
  • attorney
  • librarian
Eloise B. Cushing
B&W portrait photo of a middle-aged white woman with her hair in an up-do, wearing a pale blouse and jacket
Eloise B. Cushing, 1946
BornOctober 29, 1887
DiedOakland, California, U.S.
July 6, 1977 (aged 89)
Alma mater
Occupations
  • attorney
  • librarian
EmployerAlameda County Law Library
Organizations
Known forMajor writing of the Soroptimist International's first Constitution and By-Laws
Board member ofAlameda County Bar Board of Trustees

Eloise B. Cushing (1887–1977) was an American attorney. She was the first woman to engage actively in the practice of law in Oakland, California.[1] A life-long member of Soroptimist International since joining in 1921,[2] she did the major writing of the organization's first Constitution and By-Laws, which was required to file for the Charter; this document went on to serve as the guidelines for all the national and international Soroptimist clubs.[3] For 47 years, she served as the librarian of the Alameda County Law Library.[4]

Cushing was born in Redding, California, on October 29, 1887, daughter of Eugene Z. and Mary (Buckley) Cushing. Cushing is one of the oldest and most honored names in New England colonial history. The founder of the family was Matthew Cushing, who came from Norfolk County, England, and settled at Hingham, Massachusetts, where the old Cushing homestead stood. One of the Cushings at the time of the Revolution was on a committee having something to do with the United States Declaration of Independence. Both the Cushing and Buckley families contained many doctors and lawyers. Charles Bennett, a relative of Mary Buckley, was for many years secretary of state of Rhode Island.

During the American Civil War, Cushing had uncles fighting for both the North and the South, and it was afterwards learned that "one uncle was chasing the other across the same battlefield." The most distinguished member of the Cushing family in the Civil war was Lieut. William Cushing, who carried out the dangerous exploit involved in sinking the Confederate Ironclad Albemarle. Cushing's mother was born at Staunton, Virginia, and as a child, she witnessed Sheridan's raid up the Shenandoah Valley. Later, she moved to Covington, Kentucky, where she met and married Eugene Z. Cushing, whose father was a doctor. Eugene Z. Cushing became a lawyer, and after coming to California, practiced for a time at Redding, for several years in San Diego, California, and in 1888, established his family at Oakland.[1]

Cushing's first memories are of the family home when it was on Moss Avenue, then considered a part of the country. She witnessed a city develop from what was a village when she was a girl. Her ambition from earliest years was to be a teacher, and her work in school was chosen with that object in view.[1]

She took the courses of the grammar grades in St. Mary's parochial school, and after passing the entrance examinations in 1904 entered the Oakland High School, from which she was graduated in 1908. In high school she specialized in French and mathematics, which she intended as her major subjects in college. She also took part in the senior play.[1]

In 1908, she entered the University of California, Berkeley, remaining until 1910, when she received a Junior Certificate with honorable mention. On account of the sudden death of her sister Claire, she was forced to leave college.[1]

Career

Death

References

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