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  1. Oct 1, 2021 · Garrard Glenn's prolific writing career began while he was a student and extended through the years of ill-health preceding his death. In 1910 he published Secret Liens and in 1915, Creditors' Rights, a major work in an area of the law which he helped bring into focus.

  2. Garrard Glenn's prolific writing career began while he was a student and extended through the years of ill-health preceding his death. In 1910 he published Secret Liens and in 1915, Creditors' Rights, a major work in an area of the law which he helped bring into focus.

  3. Garrard Glenn, disregarding an apprenticeship following his graduation from Columbia Law School, was engaged in responsible practice at the head of his own firm in New York City for upwards of 24 years.

  4. Collection Overview. Collection Organization. Container Inventory. Abstract. Small collection of professional correspondence, UVA Law School memorabilia and personal diaries. Dates. Creation: 1901 - 1951. Creator. Glenn, Garrard, 1878-1949 (Person) Extent. 3.3 Cubic Feet (2 cartons and 4 archival boxes) Language of Materials. English. Collapse All.

  5. Scope & Contents. This collection is comprised of Mr. Glenn's diaries (1901-1947) and correspondence (1927-1947). The correspondents include Harlan F. Stone, who was dean of Columbia Law School when Glenn was there, John Woolsey, John Bassett Moore, Alfred Knopf, Learned Hand, and Augustus Hand.

  6. The Story of an Extraordinary Exam. Garrard Glenn. In June of 1932, Thomas W. Blake, Jr. sat down to take an exam in Equity Pleading. It was the end of Blake's second year at the University of Virginia School of Law and he may already have decided to transfer to a school closer to home in the fall.

  7. The Army and the Law. By Garrard Glenn, revised and enlarged by A. Arthur Schiller. New York: Columbia University Press, 1943. pp. viii, 187. Table of Cases. Index. $2.75. - Volume 38 Issue 1