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  1. Sandra Day O'Connor

    Sandra Day O'Connor

    Former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States

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  2. Sandra Day O'Connor was born in El Paso, Texas, on August 26, 1930. Her parents, Harry and Ida Mae Day, owned a cattle ranch in southeastern Arizona called the Lazy B. In the beginning, the ranch did not have electricity or running water.

    • A Roadside Debate and An Adobe Home
    • Two-Thirds Work For Half-Pay
    • Staying Active and Involved
    • 'The Activity Center' For Friends
    • Denton Lane Dust Devils
    • Lazy B Ranch Vacations
    • Balancing Mom and Lawmaker
    • Rubbing Elbows with The Powerful
    • Teaching The Boys to Be Worldly
    • Sending The Kids Off to College

    One morning in 1958, Sandra and her husband, John Jay O'Connor, pulled their black Volkswagen Beetle off to the side of the road in Florence Junction to settle an argument. The O'Connors had spent the past three years overseas. John had joined the Judge Advocate General's Corps of the U.S. Army, stationed in Frankfurt. Sandra accompanied him, becom...

    Sandra took a five-year leave from the legal profession after Brian's birth. Her children laugh at the idea that it was her "time off." On top of caring for three small boys, she volunteered and led several civic and social organizations, including the Junior League of Arizona and the Maricopa County Young Republicans. She also provided pro bono le...

    The O'Connor boys walked to and from school each day, often with a musical instrument or gym bag in tow. Sandra encouraged them, and at times forced them, to remain active and involved. There was no lounging when the boys returned from school. Spare time was to be spent doing something useful. Sandra enrolled them in activities of all types: swimmi...

    The O'Connors adobe home was at the end of a cul-de-sac, opening up to a massive backyard with a sport court and trampoline. It became the "activity center" for the children of Denton Lane and beyond, Scott said. After their after-school activities and homework, the boys and their friends would engage in capture-the-flag battles, fort making (they ...

    The neighborhood kids started their own cycling group — "bike club," which was soon renamed "Denton Lane Dust Devils" once the Honda Mini Trail 50 debuted and "everybody in the neighborhood had to have one," Scott said. Paradise Valley had just been incorporated and had one town marshal who rode around on a motorcycle looking for trouble. He found ...

    Sandra and John got a 30-day vacation from their children each summer. The boys went to theLazy B Ranchto be "pretend cowboys" with their uncle Alan Day, Sandra's brother. They'd spend the summer herding cattle, bucking hay and mending fences. They were "barely adequate at best," Scott said with a laugh. Scott said they didn't realize then how luck...

    After about five years in the Attorney General's Office, the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors appointed Sandra to the Arizona Senate in 1969. The next year, she ran for and won the seat. By 1973, she was appointed Senate Majority Leader— the first woman to hold such a leadership position in a state legislature anywhere in the country. Scott sai...

    At least twice a legislative session, Sandra would invite the legislators and their spouses to the adobe home on Denton Lane for a potluck. She invited all of them — not just the Republicans. "Legend has it that Mom was much more effective as a legislator when she'd been able to break the ice," Scott said. John learned everyone's favorite cocktails...

    Sandra and John also were members of the World Affairs Council, entertaining foreign guests who were traveling with the U.S. State Department. The boys recalled meeting guests from nearly every continent. They were particularly struck by the Crown Prince of Swaziland, who walked into their home in traditional garb, which often includes colorful clo...

    When the boys approached their high school graduations, there was some pressure from Sandra and John to take up the legal profession. Jay got a particularly hard sell on joining the family business, as both Scott and Brian already had abandoned the idea. He ended up using one of his parents' Stanford classmates to make a formal argument against bec...

    • Jessica Boehm
    • Homelessness And Housing Insecurity Reporter
  3. O’Connor’s Stanford legacy lives on in two of her three sons, Scott, ’79, and Jay, ’84. Scott remembers carrying a flag in his commencement processional, which enabled him to sit near his mother, then a trustee. “That was really fun for me,” he says. “She wasn’t famous then.”.

  4. oconnorinstitute.org › civic-programs › oconnorSandra Day O’Connor

    Sandra Day O'Connor was born in El Paso, Texas on March 26, 1930. Her parents, HarryD.A.” and Ada MaeM.O.” Day, owned a cattle ranch in southeastern Arizona, the Lazy B, the largest and most successful ranch in the region.

  5. Booknotes interview with O'Connor on Lazy B: Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the American Southwest, January 27, 2002, C-SPAN. Sandra Day was born on March 26, 1930, in El Paso, Texas, the daughter of Harry Alfred Day, a rancher, and Ada Mae (Wilkey).

  6. Oct 23, 2018 · Sandra Day O’Connor’s parents, Harry and Ida Mae Day, owned a cattle ranch in Southeastern Arizona, where Sandra grew up.

  7. Dec 1, 2023 · 1 of 9. i. View slideshow. For those too young to remember, Sandra Day O'Connor was so admired on the public stage that there were even suggestions she run for president. She had no interest...

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