Ruth Abrams

Ruth I. Abrams (born 1930) was the first female justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, where she served from 1978 to 2000, and the first female appellate justice in Massachusetts.[1]

Justice Abrams is a graduate of Radcliffe College's Class of 1953. She went on to graduate from Harvard Law School, one of approximately a dozen women in the Class of 1956. She was an assistant district attorney for Middlesex County (MA) and also served with the State Attorney General's Office. Justice Abrams also served as special counsel to the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, and as a Superior Court Judge before then-Governor Michael Dukakis appointed her to the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in 1978, the first woman on the Court. It would be another 19 years before another woman was appointed a justice to the SJC. Serving with distinction, she retired from the Court at the age of 70.

Abrams is the daughter of Samuel Abrams, an attorney also a Harvard Law School graduate who had the unique distinction of being the first man in America to graduate from Harvard Law and have both a daughter and a son (George S. Abrams) to graduate from the law school.

Justice Abrams was noted for being a mentor to countless women lawyers, many of whom followed her to the bench.

See also

  1. Jewish Women's Archive: "Ruth Abrams", accessed May 30, 2018
Legal offices
Preceded by
Paul Reardon
Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
1977–2000
Succeeded by
Robert J. Cordy



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