All Trailblazers
Charlotte E. Ray
Politics & Law

Charlotte E. Ray

Born 1850 · Joined the Ancestors 1911
Fact
First Black woman to earn a law degree in the United States (1872)
Fact
First woman admitted to the bar in the District of Columbia
Fact
Reportedly applied to Howard Law under the name "C.E. Ray" to avoid gender discrimination

Charlotte E. Ray was the first Black woman to earn a law degree in the United States and the first woman admitted to the bar in the District of Columbia. In 1872, she graduated from Howard University School of Law — reportedly applying under the name "C.E. Ray" so the admissions committee would not know she was a woman — and opened a private law practice in Washington, D.C., specializing in corporate and commercial law.

Born in New York City in 1850, Ray was the daughter of Charles Bennett Ray, a prominent abolitionist and editor of The Colored American newspaper. She grew up in a household dedicated to racial justice and education, and she excelled academically from a young age. After teaching at Howard University's preparatory school, she enrolled in the law program and distinguished herself as a brilliant legal mind. Her graduation thesis on corporate law was praised by her professors.

Despite her credentials, Ray was unable to sustain her law practice because racial and gender prejudice prevented clients from seeking her services. She eventually returned to New York and became a teacher, while remaining active in the women's suffrage movement. Ray joined the ancestors in 1911, largely forgotten by history. But her achievement — earning a law degree and passing the bar at a time when Black women were denied virtually every form of professional opportunity — was a radical act of excellence that opened a door that would never fully close again.

Share
Community Contribution

Suggest an Edit

Help us keep Charlotte E. Ray's profile accurate and complete.

Helps our team verify the information.

Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1850
Born in New York City
1869
Enrolls in Howard University School of Law
1872
First Black woman to earn a law degree in the United States
1872
First woman admitted to the bar in the District of Columbia
1879
Closes her law practice due to racial and gender discrimination
1911
Joins the ancestors in Woodside, New York

Join the Village

Get the Best of BOTWC Weekly

Our curated digest of the most powerful stories, newest firsts, and community highlights — delivered every Thursday.

Join 50,000+ subscribers. Unsubscribe anytime.