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Monday, April 27, 2026

Law Library and Riesenfeld Center Wins Award

Scopes Trial figures Clarence Darrow and Arthur Garfield Hays pictured outside
The Law Library and Riesenfeld Rare Books Center has recently received an award from the American Association of Law Libraries (AALL). In recognition of the Riesenfeld Center’s digital exhibit, "Evolution on the Stand: Revisiting the Scopes Trial at 100," the Academic Law Libraries Special Interest Section (ALL-SIS) of AALL has awarded the Library its 2026 Digital Publication Award, honoring the exhibit’s significant contribution to legal literature that is born and remains digital. The Law Library has the unique honor of receiving four awards in the past six years from AALL for digital and print media that highlight its special collections. 

"Evolution on the Stand: Revisiting the Scopes Trial at 100" explores the history and legacy of the famed 1925 Scopes Trial as seen through the Law Library’s unique special collections. The exhibit emphasizes the role played at trial by Clarence Darrow, drawing upon the Library’s preeminent collection of Darrow’s letters and other writings, and also showcases the depth of the historical legal resources in the Library’s Riesenfeld Center. The site includes original court documents from the trial, speeches, debates, and other publications that shed light on its proceedings and aftermath, as well as detailed trial summaries and timelines to trace the longer history of a heated debate over the role of evolution in public education. 

The digital site was created by Michael Hannon ('98), Associate Director for Special Collections & Digital Initiatives, Ryan Greenwood, Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections, Joy Brown, Law Library Digital Technology Specialist, and Sophia Daley, Archives and Digital Collections Associate. 

Henry Major, caricatures of Scopes Trial participants






Thursday, April 9, 2026

Wednesday, April 15: Celebrate Clarence Darrow's Birthday!

Come out and celebrate Clarence Darrow's birthday with the Law Library, next Wednesday, April 15!  

Pick up cake and donuts in honor of Clarence Darrow (1857-1938), America's legendary defense attorney. Don't forget to take a quiz about Darrow's life and career for prizes, and take a selfie with the legal giant. 

When: Wednesday, April 15, 11 a.m. - 1 p.m.
Where: Law Library lobby
What: Birthday cake, donuts, coffee, tea, and prizes!

The Law Library and Riesenfeld Center holds the preeminent collection of letters to and from Darrow, as well as works by and about the great attorney. For more information about Darrow, including some of his most famous cases, please see the Library's award-winning Darrow Digital Collection.

Clarence Darrow with Babe Ruth, signing a baseball


Early State Law Collection Cataloged

Aged 1779 document with embossed seal, detailing a General Assembly in Rhode Island.
The Library and Riesenfeld Center has an exceptionally strong collection of colonial American law and early state laws. These materials include a
n extensive set of colonial session laws, which forms the basis of these treasures. In addition, pamphlets and political works from the Revolutionary era, state constitutions (on which the Constitution is based), and early law reports and practice guides substantially chart the development of the American legal system from the colonial period through the early republic. Early US state material is also a historically valuable and interesting area in the collection. Considered as falling within a state's territorial period, and up through about 1875 or at least within ten years of statehood (if statehood was achieved later), these texts are represented in the Center's collections by foundational constitutional documents and legislative debates, the earliest session laws, rules of order, procedural manuals, treatises, addresses and reports by the government, as well as case reports.  

This important collection has been cataloged over many years, a project that has recently been completed. Cataloging librarian and rare books cataloger Sarah Yates, along with (now retired) cataloger Claire Stuckey, have heroically cataloged these materials to accurately describe the Library's collection and make it more discoverable, sometimes with notes about the material reflecting the uniqueness of our volumes. 

Much of the material has strong interest for state and national history. As an example, a volume of Rhode Island session laws from 1779 provides extensive details about state militia forces, payments, and mobilization during the Revolutionary War. Another volume of laws from Vermont in 1789, contemporary with the first American Congress, features handwritten descriptions of a boy's work in the fields along with hand-drawn images. 

Title page from a 1799 document titled "Laws and Ordinances."
Pictured here is also an interesting volume of city ordinances from New York (1799), regulating a host of activities, from selling meat and bread to keeping animals off the streets (on the latter of which, see a notable article by Henrik Hartog). The signature on the title page of the volume is "Jacob de la Montaigne," an alderman of the city who with other council members passed the ordinances. De la Montaigne was also an alderman in 1804, when the city council among other provisions suspended the law prohibiting the ringing of bells at funerals, in order to mourn the death of famous New Yorker Alexander Hamilton. Taken together, t
he state volumes with their unique associations and annotations form a rich collection. 

   - Ryan Greenwood, Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections

Open book with aged pages filled with cursive handwritten text.