Sneha Girap (Editor)

Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin

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Nationality
  
American

Died
  
1952

Role
  
Accountant

Name
  
Marie Bottineau


Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Ethnicity
  
Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, Metis

Occupation
  
Attorney, accountant, linguist

Employer
  
United States Bureau of Indian Affairs, Education Division

Known for
  
First Native American student and first woman of color to graduate from the Washington College of Law

Parent(s)
  
John (Jean Baptiste) Bottineau, Marguerite Renville (b. Jan. 13, 1842 at Pembina)

Education
  
Washington College of Law

Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin (1863-1952), was a Métis Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians Attorney. In 1914 Baldwin was the first Native American student to graduate from the Washington College of Law. She worked in the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs, and was an officer in the Society of American Indians. "Her appointment [to the Bureau] ... was approved by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1904. She was an accountant in the Education Division of the Bureau."

Her grandparents were Pierre Bottineau and Genevieve "Jennie" LaRence, b. 1818; her father was John Bottineau.

"Marie Louise was admitted to the bar in 1914, having completed the three years of courses during two years of attending evening classes. She also graduated with highest distinction. The Quarterly Journal of American Indians noted that “Mrs. Baldwin, who is Treasurer of the Society of American Indians, has offered herself to the War Department for services overseas. She speaks French as fluently as English, and her skill as an accountant will make her valuable to the accounting staff.”

Legacy

A Marie Bottineau Baldwin Scholarship was established by the Washington College of Law student organization.

References

Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin Wikipedia