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Hattie Leah Henenberg

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she served on the Legal Advisory Board helping men complete draft registration forms. She founded the Free Legal Aid Bureau of the Dallas Bar Association in 1924. She was also interested in the welfare of children, serving on the child welfare committee of the State Bar of Texas and creating a
147:. From 1941 to 1947 she was an assistant district attorney for Dallas County, specializing in domestic-relations matters; during her time in the position she created a unit especially to jail fathers who were delinquent in paying 139:, gaining much support from members of Business and Professional Women's Clubs nationwide. From 1929 to 1931 she served as an assistant attorney general for the state of Texas; in 1934 she was made a special assistant to the 112:, both of whom had been previously appointed and required to step aside, Henenberg had the required seven years' experience practicing law in the state She was one of two associate justices ultimately chosen, along with 50:-born mother and an American-born father. With her parents, Samuel and Rosa (née Trebitsch), and six siblings she moved to Dallas in 1904, where the family helped her ailing grandfather Lazar in the running of his 439: 454: 469: 429: 104:
hit upon the solution of an all-female court, as women were not eligible for membership in the Woodmen and so would not have a conflict of interest. Unlike
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Henenberg remained observant of Jewish practice for much of her life; she refused to marry a non-Jew, and did not eat pork. She was listed in
464: 151:. Later in her life Henenberg discontinued her activism so that she could care for her sister. She died in Dallas in 1974 and was buried in 140: 82:, for which she served as Dallas president; she was also a member of the Order of Eastern Star, Business and Professional Women's Club, and 144: 444: 424: 124: 171: 63: 449: 459: 83: 27: 152: 123:
Following her judicial service, in 1928 Henenberg became a member of the executive committee of the state
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was chosen special chief justice. The court served for five months and met twice before disbanding.
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for poor youth. She also served in varying capacities with a number of civic organizations, such as
79: 66:. She obtained her law license in 1916, and would go on to practice law in Dallas for fifty years. 136: 98: 259: 75: 227: 342: 318: 127:. She took active leadership positions, both at the state and regional levels, in the 408: 148: 105: 31: 399: 55: 43: 101: 70: 395: 97:, all of whose members were affiliated with the organization. To hear the case 51: 367: 47: 23: 54:; there she attended the public schools. She found work as a 22:(February 16, 1893 – November 28, 1974) was a lawyer from 69:
Henenberg was always interested in social causes. During
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convened in 1925, the first all-female high court in the
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Index

Texas
All-Woman Supreme Court
United States
Ennis, Texas
Hungarian
pawn shop
stenographer
Dallas School of Law
Southern Methodist University
World War I
lending library
Zonta International
Temple Emanu-El of Dallas
Woodmen of the World
Supreme Court of Texas
Governor of Texas
Pat M. Neff
Edith Wilmans
Nellie Gray Robertson
Ruth Virginia Brazzil
Hortense Sparks Ward
Democratic Party
1932 presidential campaign
Franklin D. Roosevelt
John Nance Garner
Attorney General of the United States
1932 Democratic National Convention
child support
Restland Memorial Park
List of Jewish American jurists

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