Georgia Bullock (born 1874 or 1878, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.—died 1957, Los Angeles, California) was the first female Superior Court judge in the state of California. Despite the challenges of being a widowed mother of two children, Bullock attended the University of Southern California’s Los Angeles Law School and helped establish a legal society for women called Phi Delta Delta in 1912. She also volunteered as a juvenile probation officer of Los Angeles county from 1913 to 1914 before graduating with a law degree in 1914. Shortly thereafter Bullock served as a referee without pay for three years for the Women’s Court, a division of the Los Angeles Police Court reserved exclusively for women’s cases. She became deputy district attorney in 1917 and was the first female member of the Los Angeles County Bar Association. In 1924 she was named as a judge in Women’s Court, and she became a municipal judge in 1926 when the Women’s Court was absorbed by the Los Angeles Municipal Court system. Despite having received numerous death threats for that appointment, Bullock held court sessions daily and maintained a bench record noted for its fairness.
In 1928 Bullock was appointed judge pro tem of the Los Angeles Superior Court and served from April 1 to July 1. Though she was well-qualified and experienced, her campaign to continue her appointment at the Los Angeles Superior Court was unsuccessful. Three years later, however, on August 14, 1931, Gov. James Rolph, Jr., appointed her to the Los Angeles Superior Court as a judge, the first woman ever to hold that position. Bullock retired in 1955, having served on the Los Angeles Supreme Court for 25 years.