More than 25 years ago, members of Harvard Law School’s Class of 1958 voted to create an organization to help establish and guide centers for law in the public interest throughout the country. They had a grand idea to tackle societal ills through the founding of non-profit law centers and to "plant a seed from which a public service activity involving lawyers, young and old, can grow and develop across the country.”
Instead of the traditional model of providing legal services to individuals, their strategy was to tackle system-wide reform – in other words, to address problems at their root. In 1994, the Appleseed Foundation was formally launched and today, the Appleseed Network has expanded to include 16 centers across the US and Mexico.
In a fractured political environment, Appleseed has found a way to win important victories—and we will continue to do so for the next 25 years and beyond.
Instead of the traditional model of providing legal services to individuals, their strategy was to tackle system-wide reform – in other words, to address problems at their root. In 1994, the Appleseed Foundation was formally launched and today, the Appleseed Network has expanded to include 16 centers across the US and Mexico.
In a fractured political environment, Appleseed has found a way to win important victories—and we will continue to do so for the next 25 years and beyond.
WE ARE GRATEFUL FOR THE VISION OF OUR FOUNDERS
Robert L. Bachner
Herbert P. Gleason Donald Hirsch Mark R. Joelson Edward M. Levin Richard J. Medalie Ralph Nader William Schurtman Eugene L. Vogel |
M. David Distler
Richard N. Goodwin James S. Hostetler Hugh Latimer Kenneth Lewis Arthur R. Miller Ralph I. Petersberger Nancy Boxley Tepper Philip F. Zeidman |
Gail Erickson
Robert E. Herzstein Joseph L. Hutner Paul D. Rheingold William B. Mallin Robert H. Mundheim Bertrand B. Pogrebin Paul H. Tobias |