Category: Powell Archives News
Lion of W&L Law, Roy Steinheimer, Dies at 98
Roy Lee Steinheimer, Jr., one of the most important figures in the history of the Washington and Lee University School of Law, died yesterday in Lexington, VA. Part of W&L President Ken Ruscio note to the University on learning of Roy’s death follows.
“I write with the sad news that Roy Lee Steinheimer Jr., the dean of the Washington and Lee University School of Law from 1968 to 1983, and the Robert E.R. Huntley Professor of Law Emeritus at W&L, died on Thursday, Jan. 8, in Lexington. He was 98.
Roy Steinheimer’s deanship was a pivotal one for Washington and Lee’s Law School. He left a genuine legacy, and more than any other individual shaped the Law School that exists today. His contributions were profound, and we shall be forever grateful for his service and dedication to the University.
During Roy’s landmark tenure as dean, the Law School moved into Lewis Hall, welcomed its first women students, further diversified its student body, and strengthened its national profile.
Roy was born on Dec. 2, 1916, in Dodge City, Kansas, to Roy L. Steinheimer Sr. and Nettie E. Steinheimer. He received his A.B. in 1937 from the University of Kansas and his law degree from the University of Michigan Law School in 1940. He practiced law with Sullivan & Cromwell in New York City for 10 years before returning to the University of Michigan, where he taught from 1950 to 1968.
He came to W&L in 1968 as dean, and after his retirement from that post continued to teach here. In 1985, he was named the Robert E.R. Huntley Professor of Law and taught commercial transactions and consumer protection. He also spent a semester, in 1984, at the University of Alabama as the first occupant of the John Sparkman Distinguished Professorship. He retired from W&L in 1987.
Roy’s primary field was commercial law. He served on the Uniform Commercial Code committees of the American and Michigan state bar associations and lectured widely on the code. He belonged to the American Bar Association, American Arbitration Association and American Law Institute. In 1970, he headed a White House task force that investigated ways to explain the American legal system to children.
He also belonged to the honorary societies of Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa and Order of the Coif.
Roy wrote many articles and books, including the two-volume “Uniform Commercial Code Forms with Practice Comments” (1969) and the two-volume “Desk Reference to the Uniform Commercial Code” (1964).
Upon his retirement from the deanship in 1983, the law faculty established the Roy L. Steinheimer Jr. Commercial Law Award, which is given each year to the graduating student who has compiled the most outstanding record in commercial law. In 1984, alumni and friends created the Roy L. Steinheimer Jr. Professorship in Law.
When he stepped down from the dean’s post, law students commissioned an artist to paint portrait of Roy, which now hangs in Lewis Hall.
Roy was as well known for his colorful sportcoats as he was for his oft-repeated answer to faculty requests, “My hands are tied,” and for the well-known slogan that an unknown law professor coined after hearing that answer: “I’ve been Royed.”
Known as “The Sky Dean,” he piloted a Beech Bonanza until he was 76 over the skies of the East Coast on recruitment trips. He also flew in Alaska, the Caribbean, Central America and South America. And he raised sheep both in Michigan and Virginia.
He married Jane Powell Patchett in 1949; she died in 1982. Roy married Frances Pugh in 1988; she died in 2008. Roy is survived by Frances Pugh Steinheimer’s daughters, Sarah Pugh Dicks ’86L and Susan Pugh Morten.”
The Tucker Hall Fire 80 Years Ago
On December 16, 1934, Tucker Memorial Hall, the first law school building at Washington and Lee, was destroyed in a conflagration witnessed by much of the city despite the late hour.
The archives has created an exhibit telling the story of the fire. It includes photos of the fire and press coverage in its immediate aftermath. Also found here are official reactions by the university and correspondence of the Dean of the School of Law about this event.
1 Million Downloads: How Sweet It Is
To celebrate the first million downloads from W&L Law’s Scholarly Commons, custom printed M&Ms were made available at a celebratory morning reception on September 22. In addition to scholarly faculty works, the Powell Archives is represented in the Commons with over 400 U.S. Supreme Court case files and other documents from Justice Powell’s papers. If you didn’t make it to the event, sorry; all twenty pounds of the candies were gone by the end of the day.
James C. Turk Papers Arrive
M. Caldwell Butler Dies
A great lawyer, public servant and friend of Washington and Lee School of Law died yesterday. M. Caldwell Butler, who most famously became the first Republican on the House Judiciary Committee to announce that he would vote for the impeachment of President Richard M. Nixon, was lauded today as being “free of politics,” something barely fathomable in our time.
Below: Congressman Butler with President Nixon in the Oval Office in December 1973.
After retiring from public life to return to the practice of law in Roanoke, Butler donated his professional papers to W&L Law, where they are housed in the Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Archives. These papers include one of the most extensive documentations of the Nixon impeachment.
Below: Butler’s annotated reading copy of his speech announcing he would vote for impeachment, July 25, 1974.
Here is a sampling of tributes in today’s press:
M. Caldwell Butler, a Key Vote Against Nixon, Dies at 89, New York Times, July 29, 2014 (http://nyti.ms/1qLNBji)
Former Virginia Congressman Caldwell Butler dies, Washington Post, July 29, 2014 (http://wapo.st/1lYhAgr)
Ex-Rep. Caldwell Butler, key figure in Watergate summer, dies at 89, Richmond Times-Dispatch, July 29, 2014 (http://bit.ly/1pr6vZ5)
Caldwell Butler dies, recalled as being “free of politics’, The Roanoke Times, July 29, 2014 (http://bit.ly/XgWgwU)
Our view: Caldwell Butler’s legacy, The Roanoke Times, July 30, 2014 (http://bit.ly/1xBjPf4)
40 Years Since Rep. Butler’s Impeachment Vote Decision
The July 27 Roanoke Times contains both an editorial and an op-ed piece noting the 40 year anniversary of 6th District Congressman M. Caldwell Butler’s decision to vote for the impeachment of President Richard M. Nixon. You can also view a July 26, 1974 Washington Post news story. These are from our extensive holdings of Nixon impeachment materials in Butler’s papers which he so generously donated to the law school.
Archive Closed to Visiting Researchers Due to Renovation
Sydney Lewis Hall is undergoing extensive renovation this summer and in the summer of 2015. The work includes installation of a ten foot window in the archives office. Because of this work, we will not be able to receive researchers until the beginning of August.
During this time the staff will have limited access to the collections. Feel free to make email or phone requests, bearing in mind that there may be a delay in getting materials to you.
Architect of the Powell Archives program Randall P. Bezanson dies
Randall P. Bezanson, dean of the W&L School of Law from 1988 to 1994, died on January 25. He was 67. Randy’s many accomplishments in those six transformative years included his planning and building the Powell Wing addition to the law school. This undertaking hinged on convincing Justice Lewis F. Powell, Jr., graduate of the college in 1929 and of the law school in 1931, to donate his personal and professional papers to the School of Law. Randy’s considerable powers of persuasion prevailed, and Powell announced the gift in December 1989. In April 1992, the Powell Archives was dedicated and began welcoming researchers. The archives’ almost 22 years of service to the scholarly community is an important part of Randy’s legacy.
Judge Wilkinson on SCOTUS Video
In the first of a planned eight-part video interview, Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson, III, of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit discusses his background, including clerking for Justice Lewis F. Powell, Jr.