Headquarters | Marblehead, Massachusetts |
---|---|
Offices | Boston, Chatham (former HQs) |
Key people | William Lowell Putnam, Harvey Hollister Bundy, Allan Rosenberg (spy), Stoughton Bell |
Founder | George Putnam II |
Putnam, Bell & Russell is a law office in Marblehead, Massachusetts, which was "one of the first law offices in Boston" [1] and once represented the American Telephone and Telegraph Company when its headquarters were on Boston. [2] [3]
Putnam, Bell & Russell law offices began as the law office of William Whiting (1838-1845), followed by Whiting & Russell (1845-1873). In 1873, the firm reforged as Russell & Putnam (1873-1896), when George Putnam II (1834-1912), a member of the elite Boston Brahmins family Putnam, joined William Russell. [4]
In 1886, his son William Lowell Putnam (1861-1924) joined Russell & Putnam. In 1896, when the son became a partner, the firm became known as "Putnam & Putnam." In 1910, the firm became known as "Putnam, Putnam & Bell." William Lowell Putnam served as counsel to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company when its headquarters were in Boston and remained on the company's board of directors when it moved headquarters to New York City. [2] William Lowell Putnam II was a banker as well as lawyer who married Elizabeth Lowell, handled a large part of the Lowell family's finances, and served as primary lawyer for both Percival Lowell and the Lowell Observatory while working as a partner at the well-regarded law firm of (then) Putnam, Putnam & Bell. [2] [3] [4] William's brother James Lowell Putnam (born 1872) was also a member of Putnam, Putnam & Bell. [5]
After clerking to Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes and working in the law office of Hale & Grinnell, Harvey Hollister Bundy joined Putnam, Putnam & Bell in 1916, where he worked through 1917. [6] In 1917, he also married Katherine Lawrence Putnam, daughter of William Lowell Putnam and niece to Harvard president Abbott Lawrence Lowell. (They had three sons, Harvey Bundy Jr., William Bundy and McGeorge Bundy.) Bundy became a prominent attorney at his father-in-law's law firm, Putnam, Putnam & Bell. [7] In 1919, Bundy rejoined Putnam, Putnam & Bell, which became Putnam, Bell, Dutch & Santry after Charles F. Dutch and Arthur J. Santry became partners. In 1929, he joined Choate, Hall & Stewart (which Alger Hiss joined the following year [8] ). [6]
By 1955, the firm had renamed itself Putnam, Bell & Russell with offices at 53 State Street. [9] [10] [11] Stoughton Bell (1874-1967) was a senior partner. [1]
Allan R. Rosenberg was a partner at Putnam, Bell & Russell, which he joined in 1949. While at the firm, Rosenberg handled prominent cases. In April 1951, Rosenberg argued for the complainant Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee in Anti-Fascist Committee v. McGrath before the U.S. Supreme Court. [12] In 1969, Rosenberg represented Dr. Benjamin Spock. [13] (In 1962, Spock had joined The Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, otherwise known as SANE. Spock was politically outspoken and active in the movement to end the Vietnam War. In 1968, he and four others (William Sloane Coffin, Marcus Raskin, Mitchell Goodman, and Michael Ferber) were singled out for prosecution by US Attorney General Ramsey Clark on charges of conspiracy to counsel, aid, and abet resistance to the draft. [14] Spock and three of his alleged co-conspirators were convicted, although the five had never been in the same room together. His two-year prison sentence was never served; the case was appealed and in 1969 a federal court set aside his conviction.) Spock's legal team included Leonard Boudin with Victor Rabinowitz of Rabinowitz, Boudin & Standard (New York City) and Allan R. Rosenberg of Putnam, Bell & Russell (Boston). [15] Rosenberg represented the United Electrical Workers union in New England, as well as the New England Subaru Dealers Council. He also counseled "hundreds of workers" in front of the Massachusetts Industrial Accident Board. [13] Rosenberg retired from the firm in 1987. [13]
Other members of Putnam, Bell & Russell include John Dusen (probate, tax, civil litigation),[ citation needed ] John. G. Serino, [16] and Charles Russell. [3]
The firm was based for some time under Charles Russell in Chatham, Massachusetts, [2] [3] but is now listed in Marblehead, Massachusetts.[ citation needed ]
The Lowell family is one of the Boston Brahmin families of New England, known for both intellectual and commercial achievements.
William Putnam "Bill" Bundy was an American attorney and intelligence expert, an analyst with the CIA. Bundy served as a foreign affairs advisor to both presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. He had key roles in planning the Vietnam War, serving as deputy to Paul Nitze under Kennedy and as Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific affairs under Johnson.
John Lowell was a delegate to the Congress of the Confederation, a Judge of the Court of Appeals in Cases of Capture under the Articles of Confederation, a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts and a United States Circuit Judge of the United States Circuit Court for the First Circuit.
Borden Ladner Gervais LLP is a leading, full-service law firm in Canada. With almost two hundred years of history going back to the 1823 founding of McMaster Gervais, it is the most prominent law firm in the country, with offices in Toronto, Montréal, Vancouver, Ottawa, and Calgary. About 700 lawyers, intellectual property agents and other professionals are associated with the firm. BLG is governed by a national council composed of partners from across Canada. Sean Weir served as the firm’s first National Managing Partner until 2018, and was succeeded in the position by John Murphy of the Montreal office.
William Lowell Putnam II was an American lawyer and banker.
Martha Mary Coakley is an American lobbyist, lawyer, and former Attorney General of Massachusetts. Prior to serving as Attorney General, she was District Attorney of Middlesex County, Massachusetts, from 1999 to 2007.
Harvey Hollister Bundy Sr. was an American attorney who served as a special assistant to the Secretary of War during World War II. He was the father of William Bundy and McGeorge Bundy, who both served at high levels as government advisors.
Sandra Lea Lynch is a United States Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. She is the first woman to serve on that court. Lynch served as chief judge of the First Circuit from 2008 to 2015.
Robert Swain Peabody was a prominent Boston architect who was the cofounder of the firm Peabody & Stearns.
Samuel Hooper was a businessman and member of Congress from Massachusetts.
Leonard B. Boudin was an American civil liberties attorney and left-wing activist who represented Daniel Ellsberg of Pentagon Papers fame and Dr. Benjamin Spock, the author of Baby and Child Care, who advocated draft resistance during the Vietnam War. Other opponents of the Vietnam war whom he represented were Julian Bond, William Sloan Coffin, and Philip Berrigan.
Kevin James O'Connor is an American lawyer who serves as Vice President, General Counsel & Government Relations for the Carrier Corporation. Previously, he served as an attorney appointed by President George W. Bush and was unanimously confirmed by the United States Senate as Connecticut’s 48th United States Attorney in 2002. From January to April 2006, O'Connor served as an Associate Deputy Attorney General. In 2007, O'Connor served as Chief of Staff to United States Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales. In 2008, O'Connor was unanimously confirmed as Associate Attorney General of the United States, the number three position at the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), a post he held until 2009, when he left the DOJ to join the law firm of Bracewell and Giuliani.
Victor Rabinowitz was a 20th-Century American lawyer known for representing high-profile dissidents and causes.
Children's Island, formerly known as "Cat Island" is an island off Marblehead, Massachusetts, and is part of the City of Salem, Massachusetts. The YMCA of the North Shore has owned and operated a children's day camp on it since 1955. The first written record of the island was in 1655 when it was granted to Governor John Endecott. It was then bought and sold several times until around the Revolutionary War when the Essex hospital was built as a smallpox inoculation site. The hospital was burned down by townspeople of Marblehead. By the end of the 19th century, the Lowell island house was established as a summer resort. This was run for about 30 years before being converted into a sanitarium for sick and crippled children until 1946. The island then lay unused until bought by the YMCA and converted into a day camp.
C. Peter R. Gossels was an attorney practicing in Massachusetts. He was a contributor to professional journals and co-editor of a number of Jewish prayer books, including Vetaher Libenu, the first siddur to use nonsexist, inclusive language, published in 1980.
Thomas H. Trimarco is an American politician and lawyer who served as Massachusetts Secretary of Administration and Finance from 2005 to 2007. He is currently a senior vice president in the government relations division at O’Neill and Associates.
Osmond Fraenkel was an American attorney who served as general counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union.
Allan Robert Rosenberg was a 20th-century American labor lawyer and civil servant, accused as a Soviet spy by Elizabeth Bentley and listed under Party name "Roy, code names "Roza" in the VENONA Papers and code name "Sid" in the Vasilliev Papers; he also defended Dr. Benjamin Spock.
Henry Parkman Jr. was an American politician who served in various offices in Massachusetts and the United States federal government.
The 155th Massachusetts General Court, consisting of the Massachusetts Senate and the Massachusetts House of Representatives, met from January 1, 1947, to June 18, 1948, during the governorship of Robert F. Bradford, in Boston.