Shirley Adelson Siegel
Shirley Adelson Siegel was an American lawyer whose work as a housing activist and advocate spanned over seven decades. Siegel was the first head of New York State’s Civil Rights Bureau and served as New York State’s solicitor general. She turned 100 in July 2018.
Early life
Siegel was born Shirley Adelson on July 3, 1918, in The Bronx, New York City, to Jewish immigrant parents born in the part of Czarist Russia that is now known as Lithuania. Her father’s name in Europe had been Abramowicz, but upon immigrating he changed it to Adelson.When Siegel was in her last year of high school, her family faced eviction from their home in Inwood.
Education
Siegel graduated as valedictorian of her high school class in 1933 at the age of fourteen.Siegel attended Barnard College in the 1930s, at a time when Barnard had a quota for Jewish students. As an undergraduate at Barnard in the 1930s, Siegel became committed to the cause of affordable housing. Her interest in housing developed after she served as an intern with the New York Legislative Service in 1936 and was assigned to become knowledgeable about the field of housing. During her internship, Siegel encountered Charles Abrams and Langdon Post of the New York City Housing Authority. Siegel studied government at Barnard and graduated Phi Beta Kappa. After graduating from Barnard in 1937, Siegel was voted the recipient of a student-funded fellowship available to one graduating Barnard student to study abroad. Siegel attended the London School of Economics, where she continued to develop her studies of housing. Siegel entered Yale Law School in 1938 as the only woman in her class; she graduated 4th in the class of 125 students.