Belle Babb Mansfield grew up in a house where books were treated like they mattered. Her parents believed girls should learn the same things boys did. Her mother said she had “a mind that runs ahead of her years.” Belle spent her childhood catching up to it.
When the family moved to Mount Pleasant, Iowa, Belle found herself living two blocks from Iowa Wesleyan University. The campus buzzed with students arguing about politics and the future of the country. Belle slid into that world like she belonged there. She read constantly, took every challenge seriously, and graduated as valedictorian. One professor said she had “a steadiness rare in the young.”
After college, Belle taught school. She liked her
students, but the work didn’t use her whole mind. Whenever she visited her
older brother Washington’s law office, she’d sit near the window with a law
book open on her lap while the office cat slept on her feet.
Her brother remembered, “She read the law as if
she had known it all her life.” She read case after case until the pages
smudged under her fingers. The work made sense to her—the structure, the logic,
the arguments. It lit something in her that teaching couldn’t.

