Nine in a Family Realize Supreme Court Dream
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.
WASHINGTON — The Snyders had enough people out to the Supreme Court yesterday to field a baseball team. But the nine, lawyers all, realized a legal dream team vision of being admitted to practice law there.
Chief Justice John Roberts had just one question.
“Nobody wanted to be a doctor?” Mr. Roberts asked, to laughter, after the names of the nine members of the Snyder family from West Winfield, N.Y. were read aloud during the regular Monday morning session of the court.
Donald and Mary Theresa Snyder said they had an inkling their children as youngsters had what it took to become attorneys. When one of the kids would get in trouble with mom and dad, the siblings would jump to the defense of the one facing punishment.
The parents became lawyers in 1966 after graduating from Albany Law School at Union University. As each child was born, Mr. Snyder put off seeking admission to the Supreme Court bar a little longer, wanting to see whether the children would follow in his footsteps.
Recently, daughter Elizabeth rounded up all the documents needed to support the family members’ applications to the high court, no small chore.
Following the ceremony, the family patriarch said it was “always a dream that we would all be admitted together.”