[Long-time readers of LHB know that each year I research and write a biographical essay for my legal history exam. If you'd like to read prior ones, start here. This year's follows. DRE]
Anna Moscowitz Kross (1891-1979) was born in what is now Belarus but at the time was part of Russia, to a tailor and his wife, Maier and Esther Moscowitz. To avoid escalating violence and discrimination, the family emigrated to the United States in 1893. Her two sisters died during the Atlantic crossing. The family settled in a crowded neighborhood in the Lower East Side of New York City. Every member of her family worked to supplement Maier’s meager wages. After school,” a journalist later reported, “Anna came home and sewed on dresses or made buttons.” In high school she tutored other immigrants in English and worked nights in a suspender factory, although she never worked on Saturday, the Jewish sabbath. She enrolled in New York City’s leading teachers’ college but quit when the instruction bored her. Instead, in 1907, at the age of 16, she enrolled in the NYU Law School, where, after her first year, she won a scholarship. When she entered her first class, Ashe chose a seat near the door, so she would not have to pass through rows of men, who stared at her as if she were some strange being.” She continued to teach English to immigrants by day but studied law by night. AI was in a strange land, a foreigner,” she explained. “I had to show Americans that Russian Jews have stuff in them worth developing.”
When Moscowitz received the second of two law degrees in 1912, she was still so young that she had to wait another six months to be admitted to the bar. After she was, no law firm she approached would hire her, even though she advertised in a legal newspaper that she would accept any salary. For two years, she clerked in the law office of a friend for no pay and then struck out on her own. She also promptly joined the precursor to the National Association of Women Lawyers.
“She had worked and mingled with men all her life,” reported a journalist who profiled her in 1917, “so it was not a strange thing for her to be in the law profession with them.” “Let woman go about her business, dress sensibly, and appear rational,” she once said, “and she will receive nothing but courtesy.” Yet at the start of her career, lawyers and judges often exasperated her. “You went into court with your mind full of your case. You knew you had prepared it as carefully as would a man,” she explained. “But the manner of the judge immediately became one of relaxed toleration. You could almost hear him say, ‘Oh, a woman. Well, we must bear with her as best we can.’” Some lawyers were ostentatiously polite, calling her “my fair adversary” and “our feminine opponent,” but then discovered to their sorrow that they had underestimated her. “I love to match my wits against men,” she told the journalist. “It is great fun, and I just love to beat them. You ought to see how foolish men feel when I win a case.” In 1915, after a week-long trial, she won a verdict on behalf of a carpenter wrongfully excluded from his trade union—the first such judgment in twenty years. Deeply impressed, several trade unions promptly retained her services.
Her desire for a career, a journalist wrote, “did not prevent her from marrying.” On April 5, 1917, she wed Isidor Kross, a surgeon two years her senior, the day before he sailed to Europe to serve in World War I. Thereafter, she usually used “Anna M. Kross” as her professional name. Kross considered herself fortunate to have married a professional who accepted her desire for a career. “My husband says he is perfectly happy and does not feel neglected,” she said. Presumably, the couple practiced family limitation, because they had only three children (one of whom died at age five). Presumably, too they hired childcare: judging from a description of Isidor as “a prosperous physician,” they could afford it. But a journalist went out of his way to report that Anna was “an excellent mother and guide to two young children” and that Isidor considered her “a mighty swell cook.”
While still a law student, Kross campaigned for woman suffrage. After New York State gave women the vote in November 1917, she became head of the women's division of the speakers’ bureau of Tammany Hall, the nickname of the Democratic Party in New York City. Alfred Smith, who serve four terms as governor of New York, adopted her as a protégé. In 1919, she was appointed New York City’s first female Assistant Corporation Counsel. Her caseload was before the city's Domestic Relations Court, which handled such matters as child support and paternity. She thought her sex allowed her to make a distinctive contribution to the legal process. “It is much easier for a woman to understand the psychology of another woman in distress,” she explained. She also continued to pay due regard to the politicians who got her her job. In one widely reported “women’s debate” in 1921, for example, she spoke on behalf of Tammany Hall’s candidate for mayor.
In April 1920, John Patrick O’Brien, a graduate of Holy Cross and the Georgetown Law School and a loyal Tammany Hall member, became her boss as Corporation Counsel of New York City. Journalists sometimes made fun of his “O’Brienisms,” but one revealed him to be a well-intentioned Catholic layman fumbling his way toward feminism. “I'm a champion of women,” he declared. “I’m a home man and a well-trained husband and have always been for anything women wanted.”
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| Anna Moscowitz Kross (DRE) |
A new phase in Kross’s career commenced in January 1934. In 1933, the corrupt mayor of New York had been forced from office, and Tammany nominated O’Brien to compete in a special election to serve out the ousted mayor’s term. After O’Brien won, Kross raised funds for his campaign for a full term with a “tea” for O’Brien’s wife attended by the spouses of various Democratic luminaries. In November 1933, O’Brien lost to a progressive candidate, Fiorello La Guardia (who happened to have been Kross’s law school classmate), but on his last day as mayor, O’Brien named Kross to fill the unexpired term of a judge of the Magistrate’s Court. Such judges occupied the lowest rung in the city’s judiciary, but collectively they processed a half million cases, mostly minor criminal offenses, annually. Kross considered Magistrate’s Court “the greatest social force for the correcting of individual maladjustments.” She was promptly assigned to a branch known as the Women’s Court.
(Continued after the jump.)









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