The Baltimore lawyer and teacher David Hoffman (1784-1854), the father of American legal ethics, was also the first of the systematic American legal educators. He held one of the first appointments in this country as a university law professor (at the University of Maryland, 1814-43) and wrote the first American outline of the study of law. Joseph Story, in a contemporary review of the 1817 Course, called Hoffman\u27s work an honour to our country[,] . . . by far the most perfect system for the study of the law that has ever been offered to the public. Chancellor James Kent said, whoever follows its directions will be a well read and accomplished lawyer. Most of his law lectures, as distinguished from his Course, were not written. A fe...
Letter from David Hoffman, Baltimore, Md., to Joseph Story, Cambridge, Mass., dated 2 May 1836. Sign...
In recent years scholars have paid increasing attention to the concept of republicanism as a measu...
The appearance in permanent form of these five lectures, which were first published in the Fortnight...
David Hoffman was a prominent pioneer in the establishment of university-based legal education. He h...
David Hoffman was a prominent pioneer in the establishment of university-based legal education. He h...
David Hoffman was a successful Baltimore lawyer who wrote the first study of American law in 1817 an...
David Hoffman was a successful Baltimore lawyer who wrote the first study of American law in 1817 an...
David Hoffman (1784-1854) has been cast as America\u27s first legal ethicist and as the founder of o...
David Hoffman (1784-1854) has been cast as America\u27s first legal ethicist and as the founder of o...
It is an honor and privilege to contribute to this Issue of the Emory Law Journal remembering my lon...
The history of American legal education is notable for a sparsity of ideas on how to convey learning...
Letter from David Hoffman, Baltimore, Md., to Joseph Story, Cambridge, Mass., dated 2 May 1836. Sign...
Edward J. Murphy, my teacher, colleague, and friend, was as devoted as anyone at Notre Dame could be...
To examine innovations in legal practice, the University of Missouri Center for the Study of Dispute...
This book is a history and evaluation of legal education in the United States, published for the sur...
Letter from David Hoffman, Baltimore, Md., to Joseph Story, Cambridge, Mass., dated 2 May 1836. Sign...
In recent years scholars have paid increasing attention to the concept of republicanism as a measu...
The appearance in permanent form of these five lectures, which were first published in the Fortnight...
David Hoffman was a prominent pioneer in the establishment of university-based legal education. He h...
David Hoffman was a prominent pioneer in the establishment of university-based legal education. He h...
David Hoffman was a successful Baltimore lawyer who wrote the first study of American law in 1817 an...
David Hoffman was a successful Baltimore lawyer who wrote the first study of American law in 1817 an...
David Hoffman (1784-1854) has been cast as America\u27s first legal ethicist and as the founder of o...
David Hoffman (1784-1854) has been cast as America\u27s first legal ethicist and as the founder of o...
It is an honor and privilege to contribute to this Issue of the Emory Law Journal remembering my lon...
The history of American legal education is notable for a sparsity of ideas on how to convey learning...
Letter from David Hoffman, Baltimore, Md., to Joseph Story, Cambridge, Mass., dated 2 May 1836. Sign...
Edward J. Murphy, my teacher, colleague, and friend, was as devoted as anyone at Notre Dame could be...
To examine innovations in legal practice, the University of Missouri Center for the Study of Dispute...
This book is a history and evaluation of legal education in the United States, published for the sur...
Letter from David Hoffman, Baltimore, Md., to Joseph Story, Cambridge, Mass., dated 2 May 1836. Sign...
In recent years scholars have paid increasing attention to the concept of republicanism as a measu...
The appearance in permanent form of these five lectures, which were first published in the Fortnight...