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77 Judicature 144 (1993-1994)
Moral Authority and Gender Difference: Georgia Bullock and the Los Angeles Women's Court

handle is hein.journals/judica77 and id is 158 raw text is: Moral authority and gender difference:
Georgia Bullock and the Los Angeles
Women's Court
California' first woman judge achieved her public position by identifying herself
with the nurturing, cooperative values attributed tofeministjurisprudence.
by Beverly Blair Cook                     .......

T he first woman to exercise
moral authority from a judi-
cial position in California
was Georgia Bullock, who be-
gan her long service in 1914 as the
woman judge in Los Angeles.1 Her
original assignment was to a court seg-
regated on the basis of gender. She
broke the state judiciary's male mo-
nopoly with the understanding that
she would serve as a model of Victo-
rian ideals of womanhood for female
misdemeanants. By claiming the vir-
tues associated with the feminine cul-
ture, however, Bullock trapped herself
in a small public space. The qualifica-
tions for higher judgeships, where the
new scientific authority was exercised,
were associated with masculine charac-
teristics.2 The political rhetoric she
employed to keep and improve her
public position reflected conflicting
theories of public and private spheres,
of gender difference, and of the
proper basis of public authority.
Segregation of the sexes was a neces-
sary condition for the exercise of
moral authority by women at the turn
of the century. The cultural beliefs in
the purity of women and in their vul-
nerability to the sexual demands of the
stronger sex provided acceptable
reasons for setting aside public spaces
where acculturated women could pro-
vide protection and guidance to weak
and resourceless women. In such sepa-
rate places, women had opportunities
to exercise authority,3 but the selection
of a specific woman for an authorita-
tive public role has always been in
men's hands.
The sphere of female moral author-
ity grew slowly from the private arenas
of home and female clubs to the public

Georgia Bullock, circa 1910

arenas of schools, bureaus, and courts.
Women first challenged male hege-
mony in the home, where the female

role expanded from moral influence to
authority as the mother of citizens of
the new republic.4 Outside the home,
female moral authority developed in
single-sex organizations. Before and af-
ter the Civil War, women established
missionary societies to convert hea-
then women and formed rescue mis-
sions to offer a moral environment to
female outcasts.5 In suffrage and prohi-
bition associations, women practiced
leadership in their own national hierar-
chies. The constituencies of female au-
thorities-whether schoolteachers,
settlement workers, professors in women's
colleges, rural school superintendents,
1. See Cook, Georgia Phillips Bullock, in AMERICAN
NATIONAL BIOGRAPHY (forthcoming Oxford Univer-
sity Press, 1994).
2. The meanings of moral authority and scien-
tific authority adopted here are working defini-
tions only. Moral authority rests upon cultural or
religious standards of goodness and justice and
requires discretionary application; scientific au-
thority rests upon technical standards of effi-
ciency and predictability and requires consistent
application (until the theory and rule are re-
vised). Individuals with a legitimate claim to exer-
cise authority reveal qualities that fit the respec-
tive standards, wisdom for moral authority and
reason for scientific authority. The traditional au-
thority to sentence was in the moral realm; under
the new guidelines the judge's choice is in the
scientific realm. Where the psychological theorists
recognize two kinds of morality, this approach
recognizes two kinds of authority. The phrase
moral efficiency used by urban vice societies is
an oxymoron within this conceptualization.
3. Freedman, Separation as Strategy: Female Insti-
tution Building and American Feminism, 1870-1930,
5 FEMINIST STUDIES 512-529 (Fall 1979).
4. Kerber, The Republican Mother: Women and the
Enlightenment-An American Perspective, 28 AM. Q.
187-205 (Summer 1976).
5. Pascoe, RELATIONS OF RESCUE: THE SEARCH FOR
FEMALE MORAL AUTHORITY IN THE AMERICAN WEST,
1874-1939 (Oxford University Press, 1990); Cott,
THE BONDS OF WOMANHOOD: WOMEN'S SPHERE IN NEW
ENGLAND, 1780-1835 (Yale University Press, 1977);
Welter, DIMITY CONVICTIONS: THE AMERICAN WOMAN
IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 83-102 (University of
Georgia Press, 1976); Dunn, Saints and Sisters: Con-
gregational and Quaker Women in the Early Colonial
Period, in James, (ed.), WOMEN IN AMERICAN RELI-
GION (Philadelphia, 1980).

144 Judicature Volume 77, Number 3  November-December1993

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