Ida Platt (September 29, 1863 – 1939) was an American lawyer, based in Chicago. In 1894, she became the first African-American woman licensed to practice law in Illinois, and the third in the United States.
Early life
Ida Platt was born in Chicago, Illinois, the daughter of Jacob F. and Amelia B. Platt. Her father owned a lumber business.[1][2] She worked as a stenographer and secretary to pay her way at law school, and learned German and French in her work.[3] She also studied piano as a young woman.[4]
Ida Platt was admitted to the Illinois bar in 1894,[6] becoming the first African-American woman lawyer in that state, and the third in the United States.[7][8] She worked in the Chicago office of Joseph Washington Errant, practicing probate and real estate law. In 1896 she spoke at the national convention of the Colored Women's League in New York City, on "Woman in the Profession of Law".[9][self-published source] She opened her own law office downtown in 1911.[5] She was a member of the Cook County Bar Association.[7]
Platt married in 1923, at age 61, and moved to England. She died there on December 10th, 1939, aged 76 years.[5][11] Today there is public housing for seniors in Chicago named the Ida Platt Apartments in her memory.[12]
Gwen Hoerr McNamee, "'Without Regard to Race, Sex or Color': Ida Platt, Esquire" Chicago Bar Association Record 13(May 1999): 24.
Gwen Jordan, "Why Breaking Racial Barriers Doesn't Make Us Post-Racial: The Case of Black Women Lawyers in Illinois", Paper presented at the annual meeting of The Law and Society Association, Renaissance Chicago Hotel, Chicago, IL, May 27, 2010.