Updated on July 14
More than 2,000 men and women have served as U.S. Supreme Court law clerks since Justice Horace Gray hired the first one in 1882.
More than 2,000 men and women have served as U.S. Supreme Court law clerks since Justice Horace Gray hired the first one in 1882. Within that group, there's “an ever more exclusive club,” as one scholar put it: the handful of former law clerks whose children have gone on to clerk at the court.
July 13, 2020 at 02:56 PM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on National Law Journal
Updated on July 14
More than 2,000 men and women have served as U.S. Supreme Court law clerks since Justice Horace Gray hired the first one in 1882.
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