More on our 160thThe 160-year niche: Law Bulletin hits milestone
	Reaching 160 years of existence takes hard work, sound planning and a little bit of luck.Timeline: Through the decades
	Our timeline tracks the company’s progress and the march of U.S., Illinois and Chicago history.Becoming a legal boom town
	Much has changed in the city and the legal community in the 160 years since this newspaper was first published, including a judicial and legal power shift in Illinois.Lincoln: A lawyer ahead of the curve
	One example of the change Illinois and its legal community went through during the 19th century was a case Abraham Lincoln was hired on.
More on our 160th
The 160-year niche: Law Bulletin hits milestone
Reaching 160 years of existence takes hard work, sound planning and a little bit of luck.
Timeline: Through the decades
Our timeline tracks the company’s progress and the march of U.S., Illinois and Chicago history.
Becoming a legal boom town
Much has changed in the city and the legal community in the 160 years since this newspaper was first published, including a judicial and legal power shift in Illinois.
Lincoln: A lawyer ahead of the curve
One example of the change Illinois and its legal community went through during the 19th century was a case Abraham Lincoln was hired on.

We talked with five of our readers — a managing partner, a professor, a mediator, a law school dean and a professionalism educator — about the importance of the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin in the Chicago legal community as the newspaper turns 160. Plus see how the Law Bulletin is made.

  • Michelle Silverthorn, education associate at the Illinois Supreme Court Commission on Professionalism
  • James F. Henry, mediator and arbitrator at Resolute Systems LLC
  • Terrence J. Truax, managing partner at Jenner & Block LLP
  • Ann M. Lousin, a professor at The John Marshall Law School
  • Jennifer L. Rosato Perea, dean of the Northern Illinois University College of Law

Click on the "playlist" tab on the player to see all six videos.