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Legal Milestone List

Milliken v. Bradley
Elk, Oil, and Environment
Whisper to Rallying Cry
Eminent Domain
Prentiss M. Brown
Otis Milton Smith
Freedom Road
President Gerald R. Ford
Mary Coleman
Committee of One
Milo Radulovich
Striking Racial Covenants
Murphy's Dissent
Conveying Michigan
Ending Jim Crow
Pond's Defense
Mount Clemens Pottery
Emelia Schaub
Rose of Aberlone
Protecting the Impaired
Laughing Whitefish
The Uninvited Ear
The King's Grant
Improving Justice
One Person, One Vote
Eva Belles' Vote
Constitutional Convention
Ten Hours or No Sawdust
Access to Public Water
Augustus Woodward
Sojourner Truth
Justice William Fletcher
Roosevelt-Newett Trial
Cooley Law Office
Baseball Reserve Clause
Ossian Sweet Trial


7. Augustus B. Woodward

Brilliant but eccentric, the first chief justice of the Michigan territorial court is recalled at the site of his law office. Dedicated and placed inside in the Millender Center Atrium of the Omni Hotel (by the "up" escalator) at corner of Randolph and Jefferson streets in Detroit on May 3, 1988.

Complete Text on Milestone Marker

Augustus B. Woodward

Newly appointed by his friend, President Jefferson, to administer law in the Michigan Territory, August B. Woodward arrived in Detroit two weeks after a fire destroyed the city in 1805. He soon established an office on the corner of Randolph and Jefferson Streets, and served for the next 19 years as the first chief justice of the Supreme Court of Michigan Territory.

A man of great intellect, moral courage, and not a few eccentricities, Justice Woodward is credited with providing Michigan with the legal foundation upon which the state was to later develop. He was a thorough and prolific writer, and his legal opinions reflect the skills of a sound lawyer and creditable jurist. His strong convictions led to many quarrels, but also inspired him to hand down courageous decisions, including an important anti-slavery opinion, as early as 1807.

While serving as chief justice, he drew up the street plan for a rebuilt Detroit, was the catalyst for the founding of the University of Michigan, and established and named Ypsilanti.

Placed by the State Bar of Michigan and the Detroit Bar Association, 1988.