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Thompson Coburn was the first major law firm in Missouri to support a bill extending basic workplace protections to members of the LGBT community. [12] [13] Thompson Coburn represented [when?] the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater St. Louis pro bono in a $30 million EPA settlement to clean up 10-acre Superfund site in St. Louis. [14] [15]
While "St. Louis, with its French ancestry, has been noted as a fur capital, more money passed through St. Louis as a result of the lead business in Missouri than did because of the fur business", wrote Doe Run Company CEO Jeffry Zelm. [16] The oldest St. Louis-based lead family is Desloge. [17]
King, Phillips & Stewart was founded in 1873 in St. Louis, Mo. A merger resulted in Stewart, Bryan, Christie & Williams in 1911, and six years, P. Taylor Bryan's name became the first in the firm title, where it remains to this day. Rhodes Cave joined the firm in 1917, and it was then named Bryan, Williams & Cave. [3]
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Gardner worked at Bell, Kirksey & Associates, a law firm, and as an assistant prosecutor (St. Louis Circuit Attorney's Office, 2005–2010) prior to being elected as Circuit Attorney. [4] From 2013 to 2017 she was a Missouri State Representative for District 77.
[7] [8] In 1995, it created a consulting arm called A-T International Consultants to practice Chinese law out of Shanghai. [8] By 1996, Armstrong Teasdale had 168 lawyers and was the third largest law firm in the St. Louis area. [8] It merged with a D.C. firm, Tighe Patton & Babbin, in 2000. [9] It also later merged with Pellegrini & O'Keefe. [10]
Evans & Dixon, L.L.C. is a defense firm engaging in the practice of workers' compensation, labor and employment law, civil liability defense, healthcare, collections, intellectual property, and various business law areas.
The firm was dissolved following the elder Ewing's death in 1873. Young Mr. Ewing became prominent in banking circles and also had farming and investment interests. In 1880, he married Miss Mary Flemming of Indianapolis, and they had one son, William. [3] He was sworn in as Mayor of St. Louis on April 12, 1881. [4]