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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The Alabama Lawyers Hall of Fame will
induct University of Alabama School of Law graduates Albert Farrah
and Judge Frank M. Johnson on June 24 in a ceremony to be held
in the Alabama Supreme Court Building in Montgomery.
Farrah, dean of the UA School of Law from 1913 to 1944, is best
remembered for laying the foundations for the modern law school.
According to Special Collections Librarian for the Bounds Law Library
Paul Pruitt, during Farrah’s deanship, “the law school
won accreditation from the American Bar Association, thus gaining
official status as a producer of the legal technicians required
by twentieth-century practice. Like their counterparts elsewhere,
Farrah and his faculty put novice attorneys through intense training
in the science of interpreting cases and schooled them in professional
ethics.” Current Law School Dean Ken Randall will accept
the award on behalf of Farrah.
Johnson, a 1941 graduate of the Law School, is best remembered
for his civil rights rulings, particularly in Williams v. Wallace,
which allowed for a peaceful march from Selma to Montgomery in
1965. Johnson was recently recognized by the UA Law School in its
annual magazine, Capstone Lawyer.
The Alabama State Bar established the Lawyers Hall of Fame in
2003 to honor Alabama lawyers who have made extraordinary contributions
through the law at the state, national, or international level.
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