History
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1849-1883:
The
Early History
1920-1935:
A New Beginning
1936-1955:
A Period of Growth
1956-1984:
Development of the Modern Law School
1985-present:
Continuing the Tradition
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1849
to 1883: The Early History
Baylor University
was organized at Independence, Texas, by the Baptist denomination in
Texas in 1845. It was granted a charter by an act of the
Congress of the Republic of Texas on February 1, 1845. The
university was named for Judge
R.E.B. Baylor, who was a member of the Supreme Court of the
Republic of Texas, and later a state district court judge.
In 1849, Baylor and
another trustee of the university, Judge Abner
S. Lipscomb of the Supreme Court of the State of Texas, began
teaching classes in the "science of law." Baylor
University was thus the second university west of the Mississippi to
teach law. St. Louis University, beginning in 1842, was the
first. Lipscomb died in 1856.
The School of Law
was formally organized at Baylor in 1857, and Judge Royall
T. Wheeler, also a justice of the Texas Supreme Court, was
appointed head of the law school. R.E.B. Baylor, Captain W.P.
Rogers, and John Sayles were on
the faculty with Wheeler when the law school first opened.
They were all part-time teachers when there were thirteen students
in the law school upon its organization. Students
completed a two-year course of study, which included a moot court
course and other lecture courses.
Sayles devoted much
of his time to the law school and later printed his lectures as Sayles' Treatise on the Practice in the District Courts and
Supreme Court of Texas. He was apparently the first law
textbook writer in the state. He later wrote several other
practice books and compiled various editions of Sayles' Texas
Statutes, which eventually became Vernon's Texas Statutes several
generations later.
Wheeler resigned as
the head of the law school in 1860. The first law class
graduated in 1858 during his tenure, and by the time of his
resignation twenty-nine others had graduated. Of these the
most renowned was Thomas J. Brown, who served as Associate Justice
of the Supreme Court of Texas from 1893 to 1911, then as Chief
Justice from 1911 to 1915.
Baylor Law School
suspended operations during the Civil War. In 1866, R.E.B.
Baylor, Sayles, R.T. Smyth, John Alexander, and James E. Shepard
were reappointed to the law school faculty. Though Smyth is
recognized as the full-time resident faculty member, Shepard is
generally
recognized as the second Dean of the law school. Shepard
served in this capacity until the law school suspended operations
once again 1871. Records of students or graduates during this
time are incomplete.
R.E.B. Baylor
taught a course in Constitutional Law until his death in 1873.
Sayles and Shepard continued to be listed as members of the faculty
of the University until 1883, and Shepard is believed to have taught
law courses up until that time. In 1883, the School of
Law at Texas University opened, and law classes would not be offered
on a regular basis at Baylor for another thirty-seven years.
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