Timeline

1902

First Australian woman to graduate with a Bachelor of Laws

Ada Evans enrolled in a Bachelor of Laws at Sydney University in 1899 and graduated in April 1902. When she tried to practise law following her graduation, her path was blocked.
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1903

Victoria passes Women’s Disabilities Removal Act 1903

Victoria was the first state in Australia to allow women to practise law. When Grata Flos Greig graduated with an LLB in March 1903, the Victorian Parliament passed the Women’s Disabilities Removal Act 1903 (nicknamed the “Flos Greig Enabling Act”) specifically to allow women to practise.
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1918

NSW Parliament passes Women’s Legal Status Act 1918 (NSW)

New South Wales became the penultimate state in Australia to allow women to practise law when it passed the Women’s Legal Status Act in 1918.
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1921

First woman admitted to the NSW Bar

19 years after gaining her LLB, Ada Evans was admitted to the NSW Bar. Although she was immediately offered work, she declined to practise, citing family commitments.
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1924

First woman to practise as a solicitor in NSW

Marie Byles was the first woman to be admitted as a solicitor in NSW (four days after Sibyl Morrison was admitted to the NSW Bar).
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1927

First woman to establish a legal practice in NSW

Christian Jollie Smith was admitted as a solicitor in Victoria in 1912 and set up practice as a solicitor in Little Collins Street in 1914. After moving to Sydney she was admitted to the NSW roll of solicitors in October 1924. In 1927, she was the first woman in NSW to establish her own firm. […]
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1941

First informal meetings of an association of women lawyers

First informal meetings of an association of women lawyers Female lawyers in NSW started to meet informally in 1941, first in the home of lawyer Veronica Pike, and then at the Feminist Club in King Street.
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1952

First meeting of the formally constituted Women Lawyers Association

At the Commonwealth Legal Convention in 1951 it was decided that an informal women’s association was no longer adequate to represent the growing number of women in the profession.
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1970

First woman magistrate in NSW

In 1970 Margaret Stephen was the first woman appointed a magistrate in NSW and became the first woman to sit on the Coroners’ Court.
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1976

First Aboriginal barrister

Pat O’Shane was born in North Queensland. O’Shane received a study grant to undertake a Bachelor of Laws at the University of New South Wales and graduated in 1975.
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1981

First woman President of the Law Society

Mahla Pearlman joined the Law Society’s Council in 1976 and became the Law Society’s first female President in 1981. Pearlman had already made history in 1979 by becoming the first female representative on the Solicitors Admission Board.
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1989

First woman President of the Law Council of Australia

Eight years after being appointed the first female President of the Law Society of NSW, Mahla Pearlman was appointed the first female President of the Law Council of Australia.
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1987

First woman appointed to the High Court of Australia

Mary Gaudron became the first woman appointed to the High Court of Australia in 1987. The appointment of a woman to the High Court caused those appearing before the Court to change their method of addressing High Court justices from “The Honourable Mr Justice X” to “The Honourable Justice X”.
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1992

First woman to head up a NSW court, as President of the Land and Environment Court

In another history-making move, Mahla Pearlman was appointed President of the Land and Environment Court in 1992.
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1999

First Woman President of NSW Bar Association

In 1999, Ruth McColl SC was appointed as the first woman President of the NSW Bar Association, a position she held for two years. In 2001 she then became President of the Australian Bar Association.
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2013

First woman solicitor appointed directly to the Supreme Court

Margaret Beazley was both the first woman to sit as a Judge of Appeal on the New South Wales Court of Appeal in 1996, and the first woman appointed President of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in 2013. Prior to her appointment to the New South Wales Court of Appeal, Justice Beazley was […]
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First woman to become managing partner of one of the big six law firms

Sue Kench was the first woman to become managing partner of one of the big six law firms when she was appointed Australian managing partner of King & Wood Mallesons in July 2013.
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2015

First woman to be appointed NSW Attorney-General

Former solicitor (and Young Lawyers executive member) Gabrielle Upton was appointed as NSW’s first female Attorney-General in 2015.
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2017

First woman to be appointed Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia

Susan Kiefel was appointed Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia on 30 January 2017. Kiefel was first appointed to the High
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