Sandra Day O’Connor

This biography is reprinted in full with permission from the National Women’s History Museum (United States of America). It was written by Arbora Johnson. NWHM biographies are generously supported by Susan D. Whiting. All rights reserved.

Born: 26 March 1930, United States
Died: 1 December 2023
Country most active: United States
Also known as: Sandra Day

Sandra Day O’Connor, the first female Supreme Court Justice of the United States, was one of the most influential Americans of the 1980s and 1990s. She dealt with indignities ranging from having to accept a job for no pay after she graduated from law school to the lack of a women’s restroom at the Supreme Court when she was first confirmed – in doing so, paving the way for the women who followed.
Sandra Day was born on March 26, 1930, in El Paso, Texas to her rancher father, Harry, and mother, Ada Mae. In her early childhood, she lived with her parents on a remote cattle ranch, Lazy B, near Duncan, Arizona (25 miles away from town down a dirt road); her sister and brother were not born until O’Connor was eight and ten years old. The ranch had no running water or electricity until O’Connor was seven years old and finances were tight, but Harry and Ada Mae subscribed to the Wall Street Journal, New Yorker, and other periodicals which mother and daughter read together. O’Connor was sent to live with her grandmother at age 6 to attend school in El Paso as there were no good schools nearby. Returning to the ranch during summers, she learned from her father at a young age to drive, mend fences, shoot a rifle and ride with the cowboys.
O’Connor learned to be independent from her childhood spent among adults and away from her parents, excelling at school in El Paso and skipping two grades. At age 16, she enrolled in Stanford University, graduating Magna Cum Laude with a degree in economics and remaining to enroll in Stanford Law School. There, she was an editor of the Stanford Law Review, working with fellow future Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist. In her last year of law school, O’Connor began dating fellow student John O’Connor, and in December 1952, six months after graduating, the two were married at her family’s Arizona ranch.
Although O’Connor was in the top 10% of her graduating law school class, she was told point blank that law firms did not hire women. In a 2013 interview, O’Connor remembered, “I called at least 40 of those firms asking for an interview, and not one of them would give me an interview…they said, ‘We don’t hire women,’ and that was a shock to me.”
Eventually she got a job at San Mateo County as a deputy attorney by agreeing to work for free. After her husband graduated and was drafted, O’Connor moved with him to Germany, where she worked as a civilian attorney for three years. The couple then returned to Maricopa County, Arizona, where they settled to raise their family. Their three sons were born in 1958, 1960 and 1962.
While her sons were young, O’Connor took a five-year hiatus from practicing law and became active in political volunteering with the Republican Party, including with conservative Senator Barry Goldwater’s presidential campaign in 1964. She returned to paid legal work in 1965, serving as Assistant Attorney General for the state of Arizona. In 1969, she was appointed to the state senate; she won re-election in 1970 and 1972, then made history in 1973 when she was elected State majority leader becoming the first woman in the country, from either political party, to reach this position. O’Connor earned a reputation as a savvy negotiator who was fiscally conservative but more moderate on social issues like abortion, in keeping with the majority of the Republican party in Arizona at the time. She was also known as a hardworking lawmaker with exacting standards, often rewriting her colleagues’ legislation if she felt it necessary.
O’Connor resigned her Senate seat in 1976 for a judgeship in Maricopa County Superior Court, where she continued to build her reputation as a tough judge with respect for lawyers who were well-prepared and little patience for those who were not. She rebuffed calls from state Republican leaders to run for governor, but willingly accepted the call from President Ronald Reagan in 1981 to be his nominee to the Supreme Court. She was confirmed unanimously and joined the Court in September of that year.
O’Connor has mentioned that she felt a great sense of responsibility to be an excellent justice so that there would be no question that women were fully capable, and she was relieved when Ruth Bader Ginsberg joined her on the Court in 1993. Known as a hard worker during her tenure on the Court, O’Connor reviewed each of her clerk applicants’ case work herself, and while other Justices chose clerks at least partially along party lines, she was known to choose the smartest, regardless of ideology.
While she became known as a crucial swing vote on the Supreme Court, in her early years O’Connor sided mainly with the conservative justices, led by her law school friend Rehnquist. As the Court became more conservative (specifically, Clarence Thomas replacing Thurgood Marshall), O’Connor became a more decisive centrist vote in 5-4 decisions, siding with conservatives in cases such as Bush vs. Gore, deeming “Gun Free School Zones” unconstitutional and allowing school vouchers to be used at religious schools, but with liberals in upholding campaign finance laws, affirmative action, and abortion rights.
After serving 24 years on the Supreme Court, O’Connor retired in 2006 to care for her husband, who was suffering from Alzheimer’s. She has remained active, hearing cases in district courts as a visiting judge, giving speeches and engaging in philanthropic and policy work.
O’Connor’s service as the first woman Supreme Court justice proved beyond doubt that the Court, and the country, are well-served by having women justices. A belief now shared regardless of political party or ideology.
Biography written and published August 2021

Read more (Wikipedia)
Read more (Smithsonian Magazine 1)
Read more (Smithsonian Magazine 2)

Photo Credit: Library of Congress , https://www.loc.gov/item/2002715166/

Works Cited
“How Sandra Day O’Connor Became the Most Powerful Woman in 1980s America,” by Marjorie Williams and Al Kamen, Washington Post, June 11, 1989. Accessed August 14, 2021. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/arts-and-entertainment/wp/2016/03/29/how-sandra-day-oconnor-became-the-most-powerful-woman-in-1980s-america/
“‘Out of Order’ at the Court: O’Connor on Being the First Female Justice.” NPR Fresh Air interview, March 5, 2013. Accessed August 15, 2021. https://www.npr.org/2013/03/05/172982275/out-of-order-at-the-court-oconnor-on-being-the-first-female-justice
“About the Supreme Court: Justices.” https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx#SOConnor
First: Sandra Day O’Connor, by Evan Thomas (authorized biography), Random House 2019.


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