![]() |
![]() |
|
Charles Rice McDowell (1895-1968)
Charles Rice McDowell was born in 1895 in Danville, Kentucky and received his A.B. degree in 1915 from that town’s Centre College. He spent the next two years coaching athletic teams in Kentucky colleges. This experience was the basis for his fictional serial The Ringer, which appeared in Argosy Magazine. His coaching career ended when he became a navy flyer in World War I as part of the first class of naval aviators. Following the war, McDowell worked as a reporter before earning his history M.A. degree from Columbia University in 1921. In 1924 he received his LL.B. degree from Yale Law School. That same year he married Catherine Frazier Feland. They had two sons, Charles McDowell, Jr. and John Feland McDowell. John chose his father’s profession of law, while young Charles pursued his father’s other love, writing, and became a columnist and television news panelist of national renown. Catherine McDowell, in her own right, came to be prominently identified with the Washington and Lee School of Law. Her years as secretary to the law dean were notable for her administrative stewardship and her kindness toward students. She is memorialized in a law scholarship bearing her name. From 1924 to 1927 McDowell practiced law in Florida, where he had done his aviation training. When the economic bubble of the land boom burst, Dean Vance of the Yale Law School -- and former dean of the Washington and Lee School of Law -- recommended McDowell for a teaching position at W&L. With the exception of World War II naval service and visiting professorships, McDowell taught there for the rest of his life. Though he published law review articles on commercial law, McDowell the writer is best remembered for his humorous novel Iron Baby Angel published in 1954. It was set in his boyhood home of Danville. On his death in 1968, Washington and Lee President and former law faculty colleague, Robert E. R. Huntley, wrote the Board of Trustees, "His teaching methods were entirely unique, and spiced with humor and underpinned by deep insight into the law’s basic concepts and purposes. Generations of students carried away from his classes a kind of wisdom which they are not likely to encounter again but which the are also not likely to forget."
| |||||
![]() |
Comments/Questions: lawweb@wlu.edu
© Washington and Lee University | Privacy Policy Lexington, Virginia 24450 | (540) 458-8400 |