Lorna Elizabeth Lockwood was an American lawyer and judge who served as justice of the Arizona Supreme Court.
Background
Born in what was then Arizona Territory, Lockwood was the daughter of Alfred Collins Lockwood, who later served as chief justice of the Arizona Supreme Court. Lockwood was born on March 24, 1903, in Douglas, Arizona Territory, a mining town, to Daisy Maude Lincoln and Alfred Collins Lockwood.
Education
Lockwood attended the University of Arizona and the University of Arizona College of Law before entering private practice and serving several terms in the Arizona House of Representatives. In 1913, the family moved to Tombstone and Lorna graduated from Tombstone High School in 1920.
Career
Lockwood spent a decade on the bench of the Arizona Superior Court in Maricopa County, the first woman to serve in that role. In 1960, Lockwood was elected to the Arizona Supreme Court. She served as chief justice from 1965 to 1966 and 1970 to 1971, become the first female chief justice of a state supreme court in the United States.
She retired from the court in 1975 and died three years later.
Her father was an attorney and later chief justice of the Arizona Supreme Court. Lockwood received her Bachelor of Arts from the University of Arizona in Tucson in 1923, where she was a Spanish major, and earned her Juris Doctor from the University of Arizona College of Law in 1925.
Lockwood was the only woman in her law-school class and the second woman to ever attend the school. She was elected president of the student bar association.
Lockwood passed the Arizona State Bar and worked as a legal stenographer from 1925 until 1939.
In 1939, she established the firm Lockwood & Savage with Loretta Savage Whitney in 1939. In 1938, Lockwood was recruited by the Business and Professional Women"s Club to run for the Arizona House of Representatives. In 1942, Lockwood served as assistant to United States. Representative John R. Murdock of Arizona.
In 1944, Lockwood returned to Pheonix, Arizona, to assist the war effort as district price attorney for the Office of Price Administration.
In 1947, Phoenix Mayor Ray Busey appointed Lockwood to the Charter Revision Committee, an important local post. In 1949, Lockwood left private practice to become assistant attorney general for Arizona, overseeing the state welfare department.
In 1950, Lockwood was elected a judge for the Arizona Superior Court in Maricopa County, the first woman to sit on the bench in that court. She served as the county"s juvenile court judge from 1954 through 1957 before returning to the general county bench for the following three years.
In 1960, Lockwood challenged an incumbent justice of the Arizona Supreme Court.
Lockwood campaigned around the state, traveling by airplane piloted by Virginia Hash, a fellow attorney. Lockwood served as chief justice of the Supreme Court from 1965 to 1966 and again from 1970 to 1971. She was the first woman to become chief justice of a state supreme court.
In 1965 and 1967, when vacancies occurred on the United States. Supreme Court, Senator Carl Hayden recommended her nomination to President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Lockwood would have become the first woman and the first Arizonan to serve on the Court, but she did not receive a nomination. (The first woman appointed to the Court later became then-Arizona Court of Appeals Judge Sandra Day O"Connor, who was appointed in 1981).
Lockwood retired from the court in 1975 and died in 1977.
Membership
In 1946, after the end of World World War II, Lockwood was returned to the Arizona House of Representative and became chair of the House Judiciary Committee and a member of the House Rules Committee.