Delaware Supreme Court Justice Montgomery-Reeves will give DSU's commencement address

Delaware State News
Posted 5/4/21

DOVER - Tamika Montgomery-Reeves – an associate justice on the Delaware Supreme Court and the first African American to serve on the state’s high court –  will deliver Delaware …

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Delaware Supreme Court Justice Montgomery-Reeves will give DSU's commencement address

Posted

DOVER - Tamika Montgomery-Reeves – an associate justice on the Delaware Supreme Court and the first African American to serve on the state’s high court –  will deliver Delaware State University's keynote address for master's and doctoral graduates.

DSU's commencement ceremony for its master’s degree and doctoral graduates will be at the Tubman/Laws Residential Hall Courtyard May 7 at 10 a.m.

The commencement will be open to only the graduates’ family members who have tickets to the ceremony. However, the commencement will be video streamed online.

In assuming her place of the State Supreme Court in January 2020 at age 38, Justice Montgomery-Reeves became the youngest jurist to sit on the First State’ high court. She is also only one of two African American women currently serving on a state Supreme Court in the country, joining Justice Adrienne C. Nelson of the Oregon Supreme Court, appointed in 2018.

She is the third African American woman in the history of U.S. jurisprudence to serve on a state Supreme Court – the first, Myra C. Selby served on the Indiana State Supreme Court from 1995 until her retirement in 1999.

Justice Montgomery-Reeves grew up in Jackson, Mississippi, and later earned a bachelor’s degree at the University of Mississippi and a law degree at the University of Georgia Law School. After practicing corporate governance and securities litigation law at the New York firm of Weil, Gotshal & Manges, she moved to Delaware in 2011 to join the Wilmington firm of Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich & Rosati.

She first broke Delaware’s judicial color line by being appointed vice chancellor on Delaware’s Court of Chancery in 2015 – the first African-American and the second woman to serve on that state’s equity court.

Dr. Harry L. Williams, president/CEO of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund and former president of Delaware State University (2010-2017), will be the keynote speaker for the five undergraduate commencement ceremonies to be held on campus on May 8.

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