Annabel Matthews
Annabel Matthews was the first woman to serve as a judge of the United States Board of Tax Appeals, having been appointed to that office by President Herbert Hoover in 1930.
Early life, and education, and career
Born in Culloden, Georgia, Matthews received an A.B. from Brenau College in Gainesville, Georgia in 1901, and was a schoolteacher from 1901 to 1914. She began working in the income tax division of the Internal Revenue Service in 1914. She attended Washington College of Law in the evenings, and was admitted to the Bar in 1921. On December 28, 1921, she spoke, along with other prominent female attorneys, at a meeting of the Professional Women's Section of the Women's City Club of the District of Columbia. In 1925, she was appointed as an attorney in the office of the Solicitor of Internal Revenue, the first woman to hold such a post.She was then employed in the United States Department of the Treasury as a member of staff of the Interpretative Division of the General Counsel to the Commissioner. In 1927, she was appointed as a specialist on the foreign tax credit to the Committee of Technical Experts for the Council of the League of Nations, which had been expanded in that year to facilitate attendance by Americans, attending the meeting of that committee from April 5–12, 1927, in the offices of the Board of Inland Revenue in Somerset House on the Strand in London. The following year, she attended the 1928 World Conference on Preventing Double Taxation, in Geneva, Switzerland.