Collection Summary
Creator: | Dillard, Hardy Cross |
---|---|
Title: | Addendum to the Papers of Hardy Cross Dillard [d] |
Accession: | MSS 84-8d |
Parent Collection: | The Papers of Hardy Cross Dillard |
Description: | 12 boxes |
Location: | Special Collections |
Photograph Collection: | View 0 digitized photographs |
Digitized Content: | 0 objects |
Use Restrictions: | There are no restrictions. |
Collection Description & Arrangement
The bulk of this addition consists of his correspondence with personal as well as professional acquaintances for the years 1910-1971. Frequent correspondents include Phillip Jessup, Myres S. McDougal, Charlotte Kohler and Eberhard Deutsch, and occasional correspondents are such prominent figures as Robert Kennedy, Dean Rusk, John Stennis and George Kennan. Other legal scholars with whom Dillard corresponded include Lon Fuller, Arnold Wolfers and John Bassett Moore. These papers also contains several of Dillard's speeches, most of which deal with international relations. Several files pertain to his law practice, including his oral argument in Almond v. Day, a case concerning the payment of state funds to certain eligible children allowing them to attend private schools. Finally, several folders document Dillard's activities in university and alumni organizations.
Biographical & Historical Information
Hardy Cross Dillard was born in New Orleans in 1902, the second son of Dr. James H. Dillard and Avarene Budd Dillard. Dr. Dillard, a professor of mathematics, literature and classics, also served as dean at Tulane University. In 1911 the family moved to Paris where Hardy learned French and received his early schooling. Later the family settled in Charlottesville, and Hardy spent most of his preparatory school years at Virginia Episcopal School in Lynchburg. After one year at the University of Virginia, he transferred in 1920 to the U.S. Military Academy. Upon graduation in 1924, he returned to the University of Virginia to study law.
During his law school years, Hardy was an outstanding student and an editor of the Virginia Law Review. After graduation in 1927, he accepted the invitation to serve as acting professor at the Law School for a couple of years. He then spent a year practicing law in New York and a year as a Carnegie Endowment Fellow at the University of Paris before returning to teach law at Virginia where he would remain a member of the faculty until retirement in 1968. Dillard taught and wrote on the subjects of contracts, international law, and jurisprudence, among others. In time he became one of the best loved and most respected members of the Law School community in the twentieth century. In 1963 he began a five-year term as dean. A couple of years after his retirement he was appointed judge on the International Court of Justice at The Hague where he served until 1979.
In tandem with his career in legal education, Dillard had a military career. In 1942 he offered his service to the U.S. Army and quickly achieved the rank of colonel, serving in Europe and the Far East. For many years after the war, he held various advisory positions at the National War College and the U.S. Air Force Academy.
During the turbulent years following the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education, Dillard took a leadership role in opposing Virginia's advocates of massive resistance. In 1955 he argued for the defense before the Virginia Supreme Court in Almond v. Day, a case testing the legality of laws giving veterans' orphans grants to be used for either public or private schooling. Virginia's Comptroller Day had refused to pay these grants on the grounds that they were unconstitutional, and the Court agreed. Through the 1960s Dillard worked determinedly in support of the integration of Virginia's public schools.
Hardy Dillard married Janet Schauffler, and they had a daughter, Joan, and a son, Hardy. Janet died in 1970, and two years later Hardy married Valgerdur Dent. He died in Charlottesville in 1982.
Chronology of Hardy Cross Dillard's Life | |
1902 | Born in New Orleans, Louisiana on 23 October to James Hardy and Avarene Lippincott Budd Dillard |
1911-1912 | Lived in France and attended a French Lycee |
1915-1916 | Attended high school in Charlottesville, Virginia |
1916-1919 | Attended and graduated from Virginia Episcopal School, Lynchburg, Va. |
1919-1920 | Attended University of Virginia |
1920-1924 | Attended and graduated from United States Military Academy |
1924-1927 | Attended and graduated from University of Virginia Law School |
1926 | Summer law clerk, Price, Smith and Spillman, Charleston, W. Va. |
1927 | Admitted to Virginia Bar |
1927-1929 | Acting Assistant Professor, University of Virginia Law School |
1928 | Travelled in England, France, Italy and Algiers |
1929-1930 | Practiced law at Gregg and Church, New York, N.Y. |
1930-31 | Carnegie Endowment Fellow, (Faculte de droit,) University of Paris |
1931-1933 | Acting assistant (associate?) professor, University of Virginia Law School |
1932, -33 | Summer associate, Davis, Polk, Wardell, Gardiner and Reed, New York, N.Y. |
1933-38 | Associate Professor, University of Virginia School of Law |
1934 | Married Janet Gray Schauffler |
1935 | Birth of Joan Jarvis Dillard |
1937-1940 | Assistant Dean, University of Virginia Law School |
1937-1940 | Advisory Editor, Virginia Quarterly Review |
1938-1970 | Professor, University of Virginia Law School |
1937 | Birth of Hardy Schauffler Dillard |
1938- 1942 | Director, Institute of Public Affairs |
1942 | Major, U.S. Army; promoted to Lt. Colonel, same year |
1942-1945 | Received command and staff assignments in Europe and Far East; awarded Legion of Merit with Oak Leaf Cluster and Bronze Star Medal |
1943 | Promoted to Colonel, U.S. Army |
1943-1944 | Director of Academic Instruction, School for Military Government |
1946 | First Director of Studies, National War College |
1947-1950 | Consultant, Brookings Institution |
1947 | Resumed teaching at University of Virginia Law School |
1948 | Colonel, U.S. Army Reserve |
1949-52 | Member of Board of Consultants, National War College |
1949 | Member, Civilian Advisory Group, National War College |
1950 | Active duty in International Section, Pentagon; Legal Consultant, Office of High Commissioner for Germany; Lecturer, France and Germany |
1951-1954 | Member, Board of Consultants, National War College |
1952-1961 | Trustee, Virginia Episcopal School |
1953 | Fulbright Lecturer, Oxford University |
1953-1957 | Summer active duty, Judge Advocate General's School |
1956 | Civilian Consultant, Army War College |
1956-1962 | Editor, Virginia Bar News |
1957 | Carnegie Lecturer, Hague Academy of International Law |
1957 | Recipient, Raven Award |
1957 | Consultant, NATO Defense College in France |
1958-1970 | James Monroe Professor of Law, University of Virginia Law School |
1962 | Secretary, Defense Committee on Non-technical Instruction in Armed Forces |
1962 | Lecturer, Egyptian Society of International Law and University of Cairo |
1962-1963 | Visiting Professor of Law, Columbia University |
1962-1963 | President, American Society of International Law |
1963- 1979 | Member of Council, American Law Institute |
1963- 1968 | Dean, University of Virginia Law School |
1965 | Member, Virginia Magna Charta Commission |
1965 | Member, Special Advisory Committee, Air Force Academy |
1966-1970 | Permanent Advisory Council, Air Force Academy |
1966 | Sibley Lecturer, University of Georgia |
1967 | Recipient, Thomas Jefferson Award, University of Virginia |
1967 | Member, UNESCO Committee on the Role of UNESCO in the Teaching and Dissemination of International Law |
1967 | Tucker Lecturer, Washington and Lee Law School |
1967 | Bailey Lecturer, Louisiana State University |
1968 | Member, Virginia Commission on Constitution Revision |
1970 | Recipient of Distinguished Civilian Award, U.S. Air Force |
1970-1979 | Judge, International Court of Justice, The Hague |
1970 | Death of Janet Schauffler Dillard |
1971 | Member, Arbitral Tribunal, Beagle Channel Case between Chile and Argentina |
1971 | Recipient of Honorary Degree, Tulane University |
1972 | Married Valgerdur Nielsen Dent |
1976 | Recipient of Honorary Degree, Washington College, Maryland |
1977 | Mooers Lecturer, American University |
1979 | Recipient of the Wolfgang Friedman Memorial Award, Columbia University |
1979 | Honorary President, American Law Institute |
1982 | Died on 12 May in Charlottesville, Virginia |
1989 | Hardy S. Dillard died in February |
Acquisition Information
Date Received | 1990 |
---|---|
Donor Information | The bulk of this addition to the Hardy Cross Dillard Papers was given to the library by his daughter, Joan Dillard, in March of 1990. |
Content List
Box 78:
- Alumni 1962-66
- AALS (Association of American Law Schools) 1963
- Bricker Amendment 1954
- Civil Affairs Division 1945
- Class of 1927 1932
- Class of 1927 1937
- Class of 1927 1947
- Columbia Law School 1962-63 [2 folders]
- Estoppel 1934-35
- Family Correspondence 1910, 1917
- International Court of Justice 1969-71 [3 folders]
- Jurisprudence Fragments 1962, 1965-67
- Miscellaneous Notes 1956-58, 1963, 1966, n.d.
Box 79:
- Miscellany n.d. [2 folders]
- National War College 1938, 1944, 1946-47, 1960
- Notes: Lectures 1949 (?), 1951
- Notes: Books, Articles, Speeches 1953, 1955, 1959
- Notes: Books and Articles (corr. with Rear Admiral Robert Powers, Jr. concerning Cuban missile crisis) 1962, n.d.
- Peace-time Universal Conscription 1945
Boxes 79-87:
- Personal Correspondence 1926-71 [52 folders]
Box 87:
- Practice: Almond v. Day 1954-55 [15 folders]
Box 88:
- Practice: Board of Education of Prince George's County v. Arlington Air Conditioning 1959
- Practice: Coal Case 1958 (?)
- Practice: Miscellaneous Records and Briefs 1926
- Practice: Minneapolis-Honeywell v. Arlington Air Conditioning 1958-59
- Practice: U.S. Industries v. Camco 1956-60 [4 folders]
- Seminar Papers 1950, 1957
- U. Va. Sesquicentennial 1969
- Virginia Bar Association 1946-7
- Speech: "Arresting the Soviet Threat" 1952-53
Box 89:
- Speeches: Miscellaneous Notes 1946-66
- Speeches: Va. Federation of Women's Clubs; Chamber of Commerce/William Battle Dinner 1964, 1966
- Speeches: The National War College, The Hague 1958, n.d.
- Speeches: Anglo-American Relations 1954
- Speeches: Recognitions of China 1963, 1965-68
- Speeches: "Restraints on Foreign Policy" 1952
- Speeches: Richmond Bar Assoc. -- "National Security and the Future" 1947
Associated People
Use Policy
Access | There are no restrictions. |
---|---|
Use Restrictions | There are no restrictions. |
Preferred Citation |
Addendum to the Papers of Hardy C. Dillard, MSS 84-8d, Special Collections, University of Virginia Law School Library |
Unless otherwise stated, digital materials in our collections are available for use under a Creative Commons BY 4.0 License (CC-BY-4.0). For Use and Citation guidelines, see Special Collections Use Policy. |