Jessie Bigwood

Jessie Lafountain Bigwood was Vermont's first female lawyer.[1][2][3]

She was born in 1874 to Frank Lafountain and Helen Payette in Plattsburgh, New York. At the age of sixteen, she graduated early from high school and thereafter attended the Burlington Business School to study bookkeeping and stenography. She served as a government reporter at Fort Ethan Allen. In 1898, she married Frederick H. Bigwood and began working for V.A. Bullard, Esq.[4] Bigwood took a law course at Boston University in 1900, and by 1902, became the first female lawyer in Vermont after successfully completing her oral examination.[5][6] Bigwood died on September 23, 1953 in Toronto, Canada. During the final months of her life, a widowed Bigwood supplemented her pension by working as a nurse's aide.

See also

References

  1. Weatherford, Doris (2012-01-20). Women in American Politics: History and Milestones. SAGE. ISBN 9781608710072.
  2. Kunin, Madeleine M. (2012-03-22). "Vermont Women in History". HuffPost. Retrieved 2019-08-24.
  3. by, Kimberly Lamay Licursi and Celine Racine Paquette, Foreword (2018-04-16). Franco-Americans in the Champlain Valley. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781467127868.
  4. Duffy, John J.; Hand, Samuel B.; Orth, Ralph H. (2003). The Vermont Encyclopedia. UPNE. ISBN 9781584650867.
  5. "Jessie Lafountain Bigwood (1874-1953) Papers, 1886-1988 MSA 391" (PDF). Vermont Historical Society.
  6. The New England Business Directory and Gazetteer for ... Sampson & Murdock Company. 1908.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.