Mary Cacioppo
Those who know Mary Cacioppo
describe her as a fearless leader and a pioneer.
Born in Akron in 1923, Cacioppo
graduated form Garfield High School and received a BA from Kent State University.
She was the only woman in the Akron Law School (now The University of Akron School
of Law) graduating class of 1945 and entered a field dominated by men.
Cacioppo's history is one
of firsts. She served as the first woman assistant law director in the city of
Akron, first female chief prosecutor, first woman to serve on Akron Board of Zoning
Appeals, and first appointed female referee to the Domestic Relations Court. Upon
surrendering her seat in 1992 due to age requirements, Cacioppo traveled all over
the state trying cases as a visiting judge and hearing appellate cases, including
several sessions on the Ohio Supreme Court.
Cacioppo entered politics
at age 16 as a junior campaign manager for the late Mary
McGowan and later worked for Democratic candidates at the local, state and
national levels. She also made a name for herself by being involved with elections
in a different way when she was denied the right to vote because she had kept
her name after marriage and was unable to prove marital status. By noon that day
the quick-thinking and fast-acting Cacioppo had a ruling that admonished the Board
of Elections for not knowing that Ohio law does not require a woman to take her
husband's surname.
"Mary Cacioppo is a
Grand Lady in every sense-intelligent and compassionate but firm and always prepared,"
said noted Akron attorney Paul F. Adamson. "She loves the law and respects
those attorneys who come before her to argue zealously for their causes. She was
a trailblazer for all the many women who have followed her into the legal profession,
and she is a role model for all attorneys, men and women, in integrity and the
ethical practice of law."
--Zachary
Jackson
