Background
She was born in a log cabin in Centerville Township, Leelanau County, Michigan in 1891. Schaub was the daughter of Provemont pioneers Simon and Freida Schaub, she attended Saint Mary School.
She was born in a log cabin in Centerville Township, Leelanau County, Michigan in 1891. Schaub was the daughter of Provemont pioneers Simon and Freida Schaub, she attended Saint Mary School.
University of Detroit Mercy.
She became the first Leelanau County woman to practice law upon her graduation from Detroit College of Law in 1924. Later earning a masters of Law degree from the University of Detroit. Schaub was elected to the first of six terms as Leelanau county prosecutor in 1936 to the first of five 2-year terms, followed by a sixth term from 1952 to 1954.
She was Michigan’s first woman to be elected and to serve as county prosecutor.
While in that office she arranged for the return of Ottawa and Chippewa lands from the state to Leelanau County, creating a de facto reservation. Long active in her profession and community, she served as secretary and treasurer of the Women Lawyers Association of Michigan and helped found both the Leelanau Foundation and the Leelanau Historic Society.
She died in April 1995.
In 1926, news accounts cited her as the first woman attorney in the nation"s history to successfully defend a murder case.
Foreign her efforts, she was made an honorary member of the tribe in 1942.