Chester Cicero Cole (4 June 1824 – 4 October 1913) was a justice of the Iowa Supreme Court from March 1, 1864 to January 19, 1876 appointed from Polk County, Iowa. He became chief justice in 1869. Cole was a founder of both Iowa law schools.
He married Miss Amanda M. Bennett on June 25, 1848, a daughter of Egbert and Gertrude Richtmyer Bennett The couple had seven children:
Calvin S. — died young
William Watson — married Frances Josephine Chapin, with whom he had three children. In 1888, he removed to Portland Ore where he was a lawyer and engaged in the lumber business; dying there November 17, 1894.
Gertrude Alice — married railroad superintendent A. C. Atherton of Lewistown, Illinois, by whom she had three children
Mary E. — married Des Moines lawyer D. C. McMartin, by whom she had four children; he died August 10, 1895
Chester C. — died in infancy
Frank B. — married Ella Jenkins, with whom he had two children; the couple resided in Havana, Illinois where Frank worked for the railroad
Third daughter Carrie Stone married druggist J. R. Hurlbut of Hurlbut & McArthur, by whom she had one child[2]
Career
Following graduation, Cole practiced law in Marion, Kentucky, before moving to Iowa in 1857.[1]
Cole's tenure on the Iowa Supreme Court began on March 1, 1864 and lasted until he resigned, effective Jan. 19, 1876.[3] During this time, the court issued several important rulings supporting civil rights, including
Smith v. The Directors of Ind. Sch. Dist. of Keokuk, 40 Iowa 518 (1875), where the court unanimously reaffirmed the Clark precedent and extended its scope to cover covert discrimination.[4]
The case of Arabella Mansfield, which made Iowa the first state to admit women to the practice of law.[5]
In 1875, Cole left the University of Iowa and founded Iowa College of Law in Des Moines, which joined Drake University, upon its founding in 1881, later becoming Drake University Law School.[6][7]
^ ab"Judicial Branch". judicial.state.ia.us. 2001 Iowa Court Information System. Archived from the original on December 11, 2004. Retrieved March 2, 2020.