Hill and Barlow
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2007) |
Hill & Barlow was a law firm in Boston, Massachusetts that was dissolved in 2002. Founded in 1895, the firm had been one of the city's oldest and most elite firms,[1] and was also the 12th largest in Boston at the time of its dissolution, employing 145 lawyers.[citation needed] The firm was founded by Arthur Hill, known for defending the anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti. Hill & Barlow was dissolved when approximately one third of the firm, mostly the real estate group, left, eventually joining Piper Rudnick (now DLA Piper) in 2003.[2] (A group representing authors and movie producers were the first to leave for Fish & Richardson.) Remaining attorneys reported feeling "blindsided" by the unexpected upheaval, but those departing felt that the planned restructuring was coming too late.[2]
Notable former employees include:
- Robert Mueller, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation;
- Michael S. Greco, President of the American Bar Association, the Massachusetts Bar Association, the New England Bar Association, and the New England Bar Foundation;
- former Massachusetts governors Endicott Peabody, Michael Dukakis and William Weld;
- Deval Patrick, the first African American and current Governor of Massachusetts and former U.S. assistant attorney general for Civil Rights under Bill Clinton;
- former Massachusetts State Senator Jarrett Barrios;
- Joseph D. Steinfield, Prince Lobel Tye LLP
- Gael, Mahony, Holland & Knight
- Federal Judge Reginald C. Lindsay, U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts (1993);
- Jane Schacter, currently a professor at Stanford Law School and former assistant attorney general, Massachusetts;
- Paul R. McDaniel, professor of law at the University of Florida Levin College of Law;
- James R. Repetti, professor of law at Boston College Law School;[1]
- John A. E. Pottow, professor of law at the University of Michigan Law School.
- Michael Weisman, adjunct professor of law at Yale Law School and attorney for Marie Evans in Evans v. Lorillard Tobacco which resulted in an $152 million jury verdict.
- Robert Bone, professor of law at The University of Texas School of Law.
- David A. Hoffman, Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School and founder of Boston Law Collaborative, LLC
- John C. P. Goldberg, professor of law at Harvard Law School
- Huyen Pham, professor of law at Texas A&M Law School
- Thomas Main, professor of law at UNLV William S. Boyd School of Law
References
- ^ Caplan, Lincoln (June 2013). "Esq., RIP". Legal Affairs.
- ^ a b Feibelmann, Lynne (February 2003). "Anatomy of a breakup: Hill & Barlow employees analyze firm's demise, impact". Massachusetts Bar Association.
External links
- Esq. RIP
- Boston Business Journal
- Anatomy of a breakup Hill & Barlow employees analyze firm’s demise, impact