During Ronald Reagan’s 1980 campaign for President, he promised to nominate a woman for the Supreme Court. President Reagan followed through on this pledge on August 19, 1981, by nominating Arizona State Court of Appeals Judge Sandra Day O’Connor. The U.S. Senate confirmed O’Connor on September 22, 1981.
O’Connor, who spent part of her childhood on a family ranch in Arizona, graduated from Stanford with a law degree. At a time when opportunities were limited for women—at least 40 law firms refused to consider her—she worked for free for the San Mateo county attorney.
Eventually she was the state assistant attorney general in Arizona from 1965 to 1969, and also served two terms in the Arizona state senate. When President Reagan nominated Sandra Day O’Connor to the Supreme Court, her appointment garnered unanimous Senate approval. She served 24 years on the Supreme Court before her retirement in 2006.
O’Connor’s influence on the court was immense, as she often acted as a swing vote on key decisions. Some of the notable cases that O’Connor worked on include Bush v. Gore (2000), which confirmed George W. Bush as President, and Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992), which helped uphold the Roe v. Wade (1973) decision that legalized abortion. And she was the deciding vote on a number of anti-discrimination and civil rights related cases.
The Nomination of Sandra Day O’Connor as Supreme Court Justice is a part of America’s 100 Docs, an initiative of the National Archives Foundation in partnership with More Perfect that invites the American public to vote on 100 notable documents from the holdings of the National Archives. Visit 100docs.vote today.
