STJ Pioneer: Josephine Ferro Cuccia ’42UC, ’45L Blazes Trail for Alumnae

March 04, 2013

The year is 1942: America is embroiled in World War II, Joe DiMaggio is leading his Yankees to another World Series title and Casablanca has just made its big-screen debut. 

Meanwhile, Josephine Ferro Cuccia ’42UC, ’45L – an ambitious young woman in New York – has just enrolled at St. John’s School of Law, and she’s about to make history of her own.

“Those certainly were different times,” recalls Cuccia, who is today a proud great grandmother, turning 90 this April. “My grandfather came to this country as an orphaned, 14-year-old Italian immigrant – can you imagine that? They just dropped him off at Delancey Street, and that was that. Years later, he’d always tell me: ‘You are going to go to school!’ And so I did.”

Cuccia didn’t just go to school – she blazed a trail for all future St. John’s alumnae, becoming one of only three women in the School of Law’s 1945 graduating class. And she’s quick to point out that she never felt intimidated during her college years.

“Are you kidding me?” she asked. “I was the queen of the ball – everyone at St. John’s treated me with respect. And on the day of my graduation, my grandfather was there with a big smile across his face. I don’t think I ever saw him happier.”

Landing a job at a law firm, though, was no easy task for a woman in the 1940s, as Cuccia encountered more than a few employers who doubted her abilities because of her gender. Ultimately, it took another strong-willed female – Cuccia’s mother – to finally get her hired.

“My mother took me up to a huge office building in the Bronx,” Cuccia explained, “literally filled with all different law firms. I explained that I was looking for a job, and every firm replied, ‘Sorry, we’re not hiring secretaries.’”

Her mother wouldn’t accept that as an answer.

“Oh, my mother was livid,” Cuccia continued. “She shot back at them, ‘My daughter is applying to be a lawyer!’ And, eventually, one of the firms took a chance on me.”

Sure, she only earned $3 a week back then, but Cuccia was glad to be gaining valuable experience in the courtroom. At the time, St. John’s – like most law schools across the country – primarily taught substantive law, not court procedure, so Cuccia quickly had to learn the intricacies of trial procedure through on-the-job training.
 
“Colleagues and other individuals in the courtroom were very willing to help me out,” she recalled. “I guess you could say I sort of figured it out as I went, but I think things turned out pretty good.”

“Pretty good” is an understatement. After marrying Joseph Cuccia in 1949, she created the law firm of Ferro and Cuccia, serving her clients as a private-practice attorney for more than six decades. She is admitted to practice in a number of state and federal courts, including the United States Supreme Court.

Through it all, she’s remained supportive of St. John’s, giving back through The Loughlin Society and keeping the future of the University in mind as a member of The McCallen Society.

“If it hadn’t been for St. John’s, I wouldn’t be where I am today – it’s as simple as that,” she said. “If I hadn’t decided to get my Law degree, I wouldn’t have the life I have now, surrounded by a wonderful and beautiful family.”

And the fact that she paved the way for other alumnae – achieving remarkable success as a female when doing so was no easy feat – is an exceptionally rewarding feeling.

“It’s wonderful to know I’ve had an impact,” Cuccia said. “To help set the stage for the women who came after me is, quite simply, a very special feeling.”