PHYLLIS FRYE Phyllis Randolph Frye is an Eagle Scout, a former member of the Texas A&M Corps of Cadets, a US Army veteran (1LT-RA 1970-72), a licensed engineer, a licensed attorney, a father, a grandmother and a lesbian wife. She is the first, out, transgender judge in the nation. She was appointed by Mayor Annise Parker on November 17, 2010 and sworn in that same day. Now having lived almost
sixty percent of her life as the woman she always felt herself to be,
Phyllis remains on the cutting edge of LGBTQ and especially transgender
legal and political issues. Attorney Frye is one of the Task Force's 1995 "Creator of Change" award winners. In 1999 she was given the International Foundation for Gender Education's "Virginia Prince Lifetime Achievement" award. In 2001 she was given the National LGBT Bar Association's (a.k.a. Lavender Law's) highest honor, the "Dan Bradley Award." She was honored beginning in 2009 by Texas A&M University with an annual "Advocacy Award" given in her name. In 2013 the Houston Transgender Unity Committee gave her its "Lifetime Achievement Award." In 2010 Phyllis was sworn-in as the first, out, transgender judge in the nation, as a City of Houston Associate Municipal Judge. Phyllis continues to practice
law, exclusively for taking transgender clients -- both adults and minors
-- through the Texas courts to change the clients' names and genders
on their legal documents. Note: sources on google generally site Californian Victoria Kolakowski as the first openly transgender judge in the nation, but we disagree. Kolakowski was elected on 11/2/10, but not sworn in until January. Frye was sworn in 11/17/10.
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