San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

DOZENS OF GINSBURG’S ITEMS HEADED FOR THE SMITHSONIA­N

- BY PEGGY MCGLONE Mcglone writes for The Washington Post.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s black robe, her brightly beaded “majority” collar and her darker “dissent” collar have become part of the Smithsonia­n’s permanent collection — along with an RBG bobblehead and a framed photo of her likeness tattooed on someone’s arm.

About three dozen objects, donated by the late Supreme Court justice’s children, James and Jane Ginsburg, capture the range of her impact as a legal trailblaze­r, Supreme Court icon and pop-culture phenomenon affectiona­tely known as “the Notorious RBG.”

The objects are being collected by the National Museum of American History as it honors Ginsburg, who died in September 2020, with its annual Great Americans Medal for her groundbrea­king judicial career and lifelong commitment to gender equality and human rights.

“The loss is both personal and also very public,” said James Ginsburg, who with his sister accepted the medal at a March 30 virtual celebratio­n.

“I’m far enough removed from the immediate shock of her passing to reflect,” he said. “It was fun going through some of these items and having a chance to talk about them. There was a certain cathartic nature to it.”

The ceremony featured a biographic­al film narrated by Gloria Steinem, testimonia­ls from former President Jimmy Carter, Chief Justice John Roberts Jr., Barbra Streisand, Oprah Winfrey and Smithsonia­n Secretary Lonnie Bunch III, and a conversati­on between the museum’s director, Anthea M. Hartig, and James and Jane Ginsburg about their mother’s legacy and their donation.

First given in 2016, the Great Americans Medal has been presented annually to up to two recipients, including Madeleine Albright, Colin Powell, Tom Brokaw, Cal Ripken Jr., Billie Jean King, Paul Simon and Anthony Fauci.

Ginsburg graduated first in her law school class in 1959 but struggled to land a job because she was a woman. She taught at Rutgers University Law School in New Jersey before joining Columbia University Law School, where she was the first woman to become a tenured professor. In the 1970s, working with the Women’s Rights Project at the American Civil Liberties Union, she argued landmark gender-equality cases before the Supreme Court. Carter appointed her to the federal bench in 1980, and in 1993, President Bill Clinton nominated her to the Supreme Court.

She served 27 years. “She was more than your typical Supreme Court justice,” curator Lisa Kathleen Graddy said. “There are justices who are revered, justices who are admired, justices that people can name and discuss. And then there’s Ginsburg, who caught the public’s attention and the public’s imaginatio­n in a way I can’t remember anyone (doing).”

Ginsburg’s fame took a pop-culture turn in 2013, when a law student dubbed her “Notorious RBG.” She was the subject of a 2018 documentar­y, “RBG,” and movie, “On the Basis of Sex.”

“At first she was quite surprised by all of it, taken aback. But I think she really, with time, grew to enjoy and appreciate the opportunit­ies it afforded, especially at a time when the court was changing so much,” James Ginsburg said. “She was looking to reach a different and, in some cases, a future audience. The notoriety was a way to reach people beyond the court and legal circles, to reach a wider audience about what true equality means.”

Ginsburg’s family invited Smithsonia­n curators to visit Ginsburg’s chambers a few weeks after she died, Graddy said. Afterward, the curators made a list of the items they wanted to collect.

“There was always an understand­ing there, that the Smithsonia­n would be a big part of where some of the more significan­t items would go,” James Ginsburg said. “That Mom kept all of this stuff does not surprise me. That was in her nature. She was someone who preserved things.”

In addition to the robe and a sample of the many collars she wore with it, the Smithsonia­n collected 12 briefs representi­ng cases Ginsburg argued as a lawyer, a leather briefcase monogramme­d with her initials and a framed copy of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, signed into law by President Barack Obama in 2009.

Ginsburg’s dissent in the 2007 case Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. directly called on Congress to act against pay discrimina­tion.

 ?? NIKKI KAHN THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 2013. She served 27 years on the high court.
NIKKI KAHN THE WASHINGTON POST Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 2013. She served 27 years on the high court.

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