Harvard Law School
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Harvard Law School
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Harvard Law School
Harvard Law School., Library
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Harvard Law School., Library
Harvard university, Law school, Library
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Harvard university, Law school, Library
Law School (Cambridge, Mass.) Library
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Law School (Cambridge, Mass.) Library
Harvard Law School Library Cambridge, Mass
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Harvard Law School Library Cambridge, Mass
Law School of Harvard University
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Law School of Harvard University
Law School Harvard University
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Law School Harvard University
Law School Library
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Law School Library
Harvard Law Library
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Harvard Law Library
Law Library of Harvard University
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Law Library of Harvard University
Law School Library Cambridge, Mass
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Law School Library Cambridge, Mass
Harvard University. Library.
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Harvard University. Library.
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Biographical History
Law clubs were established to provide students an opportunity to practice preparing and arguing law cases as realistically as possible. Law clubs began to be founded at Harvard in the 19th century; one of the earliest was the Marshall Club, founded in 1825. In 1910, the Board of Student Advisers was formed, and the more formal Ames Competition in Appellate Brief Writing and Advocacy was established.
The Federal Securities Act was part of a broad reform movement following the stock market crash of 1929. The act enforced stricter government oversight of public corporations and helped create the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Harvard Law School was established in 1817 and is the oldest law school now existing in the United States.
During much of the nineteenth century, moot court exercises were an integral part of the Harvard Law School curriculum. When interest in these school-sponsored moot courts began to wan in the 1870s, it was due in part to the rise in popularity of various law clubs, which held moot courts of their own. In the mid-1800s the prominent clubs were Coke, Kent, Bracton, Fleta, and Marshall. The Marshall Club was the oldest, having been founded in 1825. The clubs were made up of students elected from each class based on their social prominence and legal ability, and were often organized according to previous affiliation. (The Kent Club, for instance, was made up of students who had attended college at Yale.) During these years, the law clubs often argued cases that were on the school-sponsored moot court docket, but which had not yet been decided. The differences between the decisions of the clubs’ student judges and those of the Professors who decided the moot court case were apparently the subject of amusement.
By the end of the nineteenth century, the law clubs increased in both number and popularity. The new clubs were divided into three courts: the Superior, consisting of first year students; the Supreme, consisting of second year students; and the Court of Appeals, consisting of 3rd year students, once the Law School program included a third year. The school-sponsored moot court system was discontinued, and the Law School faculty began taking an active interest in the law clubs. By 1908, the school had approximately fifty different law clubs, the most prominent being Ames-Gray, Williston, Kent, Austin, Choate, George Gray, Harlan, English 6, Bryce, Holmes, Langdell, Moody, Parsons, Smith, Story, Westengard, Witenagemot, and Wyman.
The law clubs continued to hold moot courts into the second decade of the twentieth century, but after 1910, with the institution of the Board of Student Advisors and the Ames Competition, interest in the clubs decreased.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/142893983
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n83234616
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n83234616
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
United States
Comparative law
Corporation law
Examinations
Harvard LawSchool
International law
Interstate commerce
Law
Law
Law
Law
Law
Law, Germanic
Law schools
Legal composition
Mock trials
Moot courts
Peerage claims
Securities
Nationalities
Americans
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Occupations
Legal Statuses
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Asia
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Spain
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Massachusetts
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Italy
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Ireland
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Europe
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Scotland
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Massachusetts
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Massachusetts--Cambridge
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Germany
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United States
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France
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United States
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England
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Massachusetts
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United States--Massachusetts
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Massachusetts
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Massachusetts
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Massachusetts
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