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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- The University of Alabama School
of Law has published Gilded Age Legal Ethics: Essays on
Thomas Goode Jones’ 1887 Code. It is the fourth volume
of the Occasional Publications of the Bounds Law Library.
Thomas Goode Jones, governor of Alabama from 1890-94, wrote the
1887 Code of Legal Ethics because he felt there was a strong need
for a guide to establish a standard of honor and integrity for the
Alabama Bar. The Alabama Code was adopted by the state bar and used
as the model for the American Bar Association’s 1908 Canons
of Legal Ethics. The code became the standard for state ethics codes.
Although the ABA supplemented and reformulated its Canons into what
is now the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, the Alabama Code
has remained at its core. The book features a side-by-side comparison
of the 1887 Alabama Code and the 1908 ABA Canons, illustrating the
strong similarity between the two.
Law School Archivist David Durham and Special Collections Librarian
Paul M. Pruitt Jr. provided the background material and edited the
Code, while Professor Carol Andrews contributed a legal analysis
and historical perspective. The book reproduces the Alabama Code
and features several archival photographs and drawings. On the cover,
a photograph of the ornate dome of the Alabama State Capitol with
its mural panels wraps from the front to the back cover.
Previous Bounds Law Library publications include A Catalogue
and a Guide to the Howell Heflin Collection; Wade Keyes’ Introductory
Lecture to the Montgomery Law School: Legal Education in Mid-Nineteenth
Century Alabama; and The Private Life of a New South Lawyer: Stephens
Croom’s 1875-1876 Journal.
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