Training for the Public Profession of the Law Historical Development And Princ
Training for the Public Profession of the Law Historical Development And Princ
Alfred Zantzinger Reed
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CHAPTER XVIII MULTIPLICATION OF LAW SCHOOLS AND LAW SCHOOL STUDENTS AFTER THE CIVIL WAR 1 . Number of Law Schools AT the outbreak of the Civil War, the total number of degree-con- -ZjL fening law schools was twenty-two, of which eight were in the southern states, including Kentucky. There were at this time sixty -five medical schools. As a result of the conflict, all the southern law schools except the University of Virginia were closed, but all except old Wil- liam and Mary promptly resumed op...erations.^ Only one northern school closed during the war, and new ventures or revivals of old schools, both in the North and in the South, brought up the total by 1870 to thirty- one, or double what it had been twenty years before. Between 1870 and 1890 this figure was again doubled, and between 1890 and 1910 doubled once more. By this date the saturation point had been nearly reached. The rate of increase since then has been much more moderate.^ Law schools still continued to increase, however, while, since 1904, the num- ber of medical schools had begun to diminish.
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