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List of first minority male lawyers and judges in Wisconsin

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This is a list of the first minority male lawyer(s) and judge(s) in Wisconsin. It includes the year in which the men were admitted to practice law (in parentheses). Also included are men who achieved other distinctions such becoming the first in their state to graduate from law school or become a political figure.

Firsts in Wisconsin's history

Lawyers

State judges

  • First Jewish American male (circuit court): Charles L. Aarons in 1925
  • First African American male to run for judicial seat: Andrew R. Reneau in 1955
  • First Italian American male: John Fiorenza in 1966
  • First African American male: Harold Jackson Jr. in 1972
  • First Hispanic American male: Ness Flores in 1978
  • First male judge (who is deaf) to use a computerized transcription system in a Wisconsin court: Richard S. Brown in 1983
  • First African American male elected without being appointed by a governor: Carl Ashley in 1999
  • First Latino American male elected to the circuit court without being appointed by a governor: Ralph Ramirez around 1999
  • First African American male (Wisconsin Court of Appeals): Paul B. Higginbotham (1985) in 2003
  • First Asian American male (Japanese ancestry): Glenn H. Yamahiro (1991) in 2003
  • First African American male (Wisconsin Supreme Court): Louis B. Butler (1977) in 2004
  • First Latino American male (Wisconsin Court of Appeals): Pedro Colón in 2023
  • First Filipino American male: Raphael Ramos in 2023

Federal judges

Assistant United States Attorney

  • First African American male: Grady L. Pettigrew, Jr. in 1975

District Attorney

  • First African American male: Ismael Ozanne in 2010

Assistant District Attorney

  • First African American male: Andrew R. Reneau

State Bar of Wisconsin

  • First Jewish American male president: Benjamin Poss in 1937

Firsts in local history

See also

Other topics of interest

References

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  2. Quaife, Milo Milton; Schafer, Joseph; Alexander, Edward Porter (2007). Wisconsin Magazine of History. State Historical Society of Wisconsin.
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  4. ^ "How a Milwaukee Opera House Kick Started the Fight for Civil Rights". MKE Memoirs. February 11, 2013. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
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  13. ^ "The History of Wisconsin's Black Lawyers 2019" (PDF). Wisconsin Association of African American Lawyers. 2019.
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  18. ^ "Judge Ralph Ramirez: On the Art and Science of Being a Judge". State Bar of Wisconsin. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
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