Not
quite a year after the founding of the American Bar
Association, some Baltimore attorneys gathered on June
7, 1879 to propose that a bar association be founded
in this city. Virtually nothing is known of the circumstances
of that meeting, neither the number who attended, nor
where it was held nor upon whose urging it was called.
It apparently merited no general notice as word of
its occurrence is not to be found in the pages of the
contemporary press, until the following story appeared
on the front page of the Baltimore Sun on December
27, 1879.
At a meeting of a number of members
of the bar of Baltimore City, held June 7, of this
year, it was resolved to undertake the formation of
a bar association. Messrs. E.J.D. Cross, Skipwith Wilmer,
William A. Fisher, R.J. Gittings and John C. King were
appointed a committee to prepare a constitution and
call a meeting for the purpose of organizing such an
association. A meeting was held last night in the rooms
of the Maryland Historical Society for this purpose.
Nearly one hundred members of the bar of this city
were present. Mr. S. Teackle Wallis was made temporary
chairman, and Mr. Skipwith Wilmer secretary pro tem.
The committee reported a constitution, setting forth
the object of the association to be to maintain the
honor and dignity of the profession of law, and to
encourage legal science and the proper administration
of justice. It further provides that any member of
the association found guilty of malfeasance shall be
expelled, and members of the association or not, found
guilty of malfeasance shall be prosecuted by a committee
of grievances, appointed by the president, counsel
to employed for the purpose. The fee for admission
to the association was fixed at $5.00 and the annual
dues at $2.00. The constitution was read and adopted.
Messrs. William F. Frick. Charles Marshall and L.L.
Conrad were appointed a committee to nominate officers
for the ensuing year. They reported the following,
who were unanimously elected: President, S. Teackle
Wallis; Vice-presidents, Archibald Stirling, Jr., William
A. Fisher; Secretary, Skipwith Wilmer; Treasurer, Daniel
M. Thomas; Executive Committee, Edward Duffy, John
P. Poe, John K. Cowen; Committee on Admission, E. Otis
Hinckley, Bernard Carter, R.D. Morrison, George C.
Maund, T.W. Hall, Jr., John J. Donaldson, Arthur George
Brown, John C. King, Jacob I. Cohen. After some further
business of minor importance the association adjourned.
The meeting was convened in the
old Athenaeum, located on the northwest corner of St.
Paul and Saratoga Streets. This was a famous building,
built in 1848 to house the Maryland Historical Society,
the Library Company of Baltimore and the Mercantile
Library. It was designed by Robert Carey Long, Jr.,
the same architect who designed the Franklin Street
Presbyterian Church, the Greenmount Cemetery gate and
many other important structures. After the Historical
Society moved out in 1918, it was leased by the State
for offices of the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles and
the Board of Labor Statistics before it was torn down
in 1929 to make way for a parking garage.
(From History
of the Bar Association of Baltimore City by James
F. Schneider, 1980)
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