| http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#value | - I. THE LAW SCHOOL AND ITS MOOT COURT Tapping Reeve had lived in Litchfield since his admission to the Connecticut bar in 1772.(3) For a time, like other lawyers, he taught students who apprenticed in his office; one of his first pupils was his brother-in-law, Aaron Burr.(4) The transformation of that office teaching practice into a law school may be dated either from 1782, when Reeve began develop
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