THE FAIR LABOR LAWYER Bessie Margolin




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Summary: Bessie Margolin grew up the New Orleans Jewish Orphan's Home, was one of the first women to graduate from Tulane Law School and earned her PhD in Law from Yale University in 1932. Her groundbreaking work as Assistant Solicitor of Labor for the New Deal's Fair Labor Standards Act championed many of the wage and hour rights Americans take for granted today and enshrined in law the basic human dignity of American workers. She still ranks sixth for most arguments at the Supreme Court by a woman, and her brilliance in banter with the Justices is legendary. Margolin's passionate dedication to her life's work made an indelible impact on American legal history and the lives of ordinary Americans.<br> <br> It also shaped the life of our guest Marlene Trestman, author of Fair Labor Lawyer: The Remarkable Life of New Deal Attorney and Supreme Court Advocate Bessie Margolin. Trestman followed Margolin's guidance and her model from fellow ward of the the New Orleans Jewish Children's service to study at a prestigious law school, and finally to admission at the Supreme Court.