The American Society for Legal History has posted a memorial for William E. Nelson, whose passing we noted in December. The "In Memoriam," by Hendrik Hartog (Princeton University), begins:
Bill Nelson, who died three months ago, was a pivotal and transformative figure in the growth of the field of American legal history. His scholarship included several monuments and field defining works. His mentorship was unmatched. Because of him, the Golieb Seminar at NYU Law School became a necessary way station for two generations of budding legal historians. And his generosity of spirit was legendary. He changed many lives, all for the better.
Bill was both an intense and serious historian and an even more intense and serious lawyer. But he also engaged with both law and history with an incredible sense of fun and joy. His work was always marked by an amazing work-ethic and what can only be called sitzfleisch. He read cases and cases and cases. He believed in reading everything, all the primary documents. When he covered a subject, he did so in ways that no else one ever did. Selectivity and sampling were not his ways. Coverage was. And the results could be immensely revealing. He worked hard, and he worked fast. And he left an extraordinary body of scholarship.
Read on here.
-- Karen Tani



















