"Honoring and Advancing the Pursuit of Equal Justice
and the Role of Counsel for the Poor."


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The National Equal Justice Library is a unique institution.

It is the first and only national institution in the United States dedicated to:

  • Preserving the Past
    by rescuing, collecting and preserving unique materials that document the history of the struggle to provide equal justice for all.

  • Serving the Present
    by making the collections available to the public and by hosting educational programs.

  • Improving the Future
    by inspiring this and future generations of lawyers to serve the poor.

Reggie Directory

A section of this website is devoted to the more than 2,300 alumni of the Reginald Heber Smith Fellowship Program which flourished from 1967 through 1983. Beginning in 1997, the National Equal Justice Library began a project to gather addresses and information from all former "Reggies." This elite corps of lawyers soon became known as "Reggies" and while many remained in legal services, others went on to prominence in other fields, becoming governors, congressmen, cabinet members, law school deans and professors, and excelling many other fields.

The Reggie Alumni Directory, available on-line, is secure and available only to Reggie Alumni. Once you log in you can up-date your contact information and search for other Reggie Alumni.

If this is your first time to access the directory, log in as follows:

Your user name is your first initial, followed by your last name with no spaces (i.e. rsmith). The default password is simply "password". Once you have logged in you will be prompted to create your own private password.

More News

Equal Justice Library moves to Georgetown University Law Center from American University Law School.

On September 5, 2006, the Equal Justice Library found a new home at Georgetown University Law Center's  Edward Bennett Williams Law Library  Georgetown has acquired the books, papers, oral histories, and other materials of the National Equal Justice Library, the nation’s first institution established to commemorate the legal profession’s history of providing counsel to those unable to afford it. 

Created nearly two decades ago, the Library honors those who have worked throughout the nation’s history to provide equal justice for all.  Its collection includes a sixteenth century book believed to be the first compilation of English statutes, including one enacted in 1495 which created a right to counsel in civil cases for the indigent, and a 1993 interview with members of the pro bono team that represented Clarence Gideon in the 1963 landmark Supreme Court case of Gideon v. Wainwright, which upheld the constitutional right to counsel in criminal cases. 

“The Georgetown Law Center, located only a few blocks from the Congress, the U.S. Supreme Court, and the D.C. Courts, is an ideal place for policy makers and organizations interested in legal aid and public defenders  to make use of the Library,” said Jack Londen, President of the National Equal Justice Library.  “Students of comparative and international law will find a large collection of materials about access to justice in many other countries,” said Justice Earl Johnson, Jr. of the California 2nd District Court of Appeals and a former President of the Library.      

“Georgetown Law was a pioneer in providing access to justice, through its clinical programs, fellowships, and Office of Public Interest and Community Service (OPICS), as well as itsearly association with bar leaders committed to this cause,” noted Georgetown Law Librarian Robert Oakley.  “We are a natural home for these historic documents; they will be put to good use by our faculty, who continue in the founding traditions of the civil rights and access to justice movements.” 

“Our hope is that the collection and the scholarship it will foster will inspire future generations of Georgetown lawyers to consider serving their communities through public interest and pro bono work,” added Georgetown Law Dean T. Alexander Aleinikoff. 

Reginald Heber Smith Award

Named for Reginald Heber Smith in recognition of his influential 1919 book, Justice and the Poor, which is often credited with starting the national legal aid movement in the United States.

Co-authors Austin Sarat William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College and Stuart Scheingold Professor Emeritus at the University of Washington were awarded the Smith award for their book Cause Lawyering: Political Commitments / Professional Responsibilities

Recent Donations and Acquisitions

The National Equal Justice Library recently received a large donation from the Morrison & Foerster Foundation and another from the Community Foundation of Texas. Many generous individuals, including former "Reggie" fellows have also supported the Library through financial donations.

In recent months we have received several donations of materials. Philip Lewis donated books and archival materials, including international and foreign language books and articles. Following up on previous donations, Carol Ruth Silver donated a large box of case dockets dating from the late 1960s and early 1970s, and Nancy J. Kleeman donated a collection of Minnesota Legal Services Coalition Newsletters. View the complete list of materials donors > >.