Belva Ann Lockwood (born Oct. 24, 1830, Royalton, N.Y., U.S.—died May 19, 1917, Washington, D.C.) was an American feminist and lawyer who was the first woman admitted to practice law before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Belva Bennett attended country schools until she was 15 and then taught in them until her marriage in 1848 to Uriah H. McNall, who died in 1853. She then resumed teaching and continued her own education. She graduated from Genesee College (forerunner of Syracuse University) in 1857. After college she continued as a teacher in various towns in upper New York state until 1866, when she moved to Washington, D.C. There she taught for a year and, while operating her own private school, began to study law. In 1868 she married Ezekiel Lockwood, a former minister and dentist who took over her school. After Columbian College (now George Washington University), Georgetown University, and Howard University had each refused her admission, she was enrolled in the new National University Law School in 1871. She graduated in 1873 and in the same year was admitted to the District of Columbia bar. She was not allowed to speak before the Supreme Court because of “custom.”
Offended by the legal and economic discrimination against women in American society, Lockwood became one of the most effective advocates of women’s rights of her time. Although her law practice dealt primarily with pension claims against the government, her work in Washington gave her the opportunity to lobby on behalf of legislation favourable to women. She drafted a bill for equal pay for equal work by women in government employment, and the bill was enacted into law in 1872. After being denied admission to the Supreme Court in 1876 she singlehandedly lobbied enabling legislation through Congress and in March 1879 became the first woman to avail herself of the new law. She gained national prominence as a lecturer on women’s rights and was active in the affairs of various suffrage organizations.
In 1884 and 1888 Lockwood ran for the presidency on the ticket of the National Equal Rights Party, a small California group. She was chosen by the Department of State to be a delegate to the International Congress of Charities, Correction, and Philanthropy at Geneva in 1896, and she attended peace congresses in Europe in 1889, 1906, 1908, and 1911. She took a prominent part in the campaign headed by Ellen S. Mussey that secured for the married women of the district equal property rights (see Married Women’s Property Acts) and equal guardianship of children in 1896. When the statehood bills for Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arizona came before Congress in 1903, she prepared amendments granting suffrage to women in the proposed new states. She later held office in several reform organizations.