Ginger was born in 1925 in
East Lansing, Michigan, to radical parents. Her father was from a rural family of English Quaker descent; her mother was urban and of Lithuanian Jewish heritage. Ginger graduated from the
University of Michigan Law School in 1947, one of only eight women in her class. She met her first husband, historian
Ray Ginger, at Michigan. Ann Ginger practiced labor law in Ohio for a few years, and then moved with her husband to Boston in 1951 when he was hired by the
Harvard Business School as a journal editor. Forced to leave Harvard for their refusal to sign
non-Communist oaths, the couple moved to New York City. Ann Ginger began working half-time as an administrator for the
National Lawyers Guild while raising two children; between 1954 and 1959 she rose to the position of editor of the NLG's professional journal,
The Guild Practitioner. In 1955, Ginger began compiling and publishing the
Civil Liberties Docket, a summary and archive of contemporary civil rights and civil liberties litigation materials and decisions, much of which was "not otherwise available." Ginger argued and won a case before the
U.S. Supreme Court in 1959, upholding the due process rights of a target of
Ohio's state-level Un-American Activities Commission. In 1962, she was the only woman lawyer to attend the first joint meeting of black and white attorneys in the South, co-sponsored in
Atlanta by the Guild and the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference. There she spoke in favor of the
Civil Rights Movement also supporting
women's rights. In 1965, she founded the independent nonprofit
Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Institute in Berkeley, named for scholar
Alexander Meiklejohn. She was an expert in human rights and peace law under the statutes and treaties of the United States and the
United Nations. In the 21st century her life partner was J.R. "Richard" Challacombe. One son predeceased her. Ginger died in Berkeley on August 20, 2025, at the age of 100. ==Marriage and Harvard controversy==