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  1. The Litchfield Law School was a law school in Litchfield, Connecticut, that operated from 1774 to 1833. Litchfield was the first independent law school established in America for reading law . Founded and led by lawyer Tapping Reeve , the proprietary school was unaffiliated with any college or university. [3]

    • October 15, 1966
    • December 21, 1965
    • 1784
  2. Litchfield Law School www.LitchfieldLawSchool.com: SECTION 1 Title 1 Title 2 Title 3. SECTION 2 Title 1 Title 2 Title 3 Title 4

  3. Tapping Reeve’s law school, noted The Litchfield Enquirer on November 11, 1830, “presents advantages enjoyed by few, if any, institutions of the kind of our country. It has sent forth into the world many gentlemen distinguished no less as Statesmen than Civilians.”

  4. 30 de mar. de 2021 · By Edward T. Howe. The Litchfield Law School, founded in 1784 by Tapping Reeve, became the first professional law school in Connecticut, the first proprietary (i.e., ownership) law school not affiliated with an educational institution in the United States, and the second oldest law school in the nation (after the William & Mary Law School in Virginia).

  5. Presentation of the Reeve Law School building to the Litchfield Historical Society at Litchfield, Conn., August 22d, 1911. Litchfield, CT: Litchfield Enquirer Press, 1911. Litchfield Historical Society. The Noblest Study: The Legacy of America's First School of Law. Permanent Exhibition, Tapping Reeve House, Litchfield, CT. Litchfield Law ...

    • Aaron Burr Reeve
  6. 29 de may. de 2018 · LITCHFIELD LAW SCHOOL. LITCHFIELD LAW SCHOOL was established in 1784 in Litchfield, Conn., by Tapping Reeve, who was its only teacher until 1798.In that year he was succeeded by James Gould, who developed an institution that in the early years of the nineteenth century gave legal training to hundreds of young men from almost every state in the Union and numbered among its graduates some of the ...

  7. Litchfield Law School History The Litchfield Law School was founded in 1784, the first formal school of training for the legal profession in the United States. The school continued until 1833, training more than 1,000 men from throughout the country who went on to have an amazing influence on political, economic and legal developments of the ante-bellum period.