Ginsburg was born in
Manhattan on April 20, 1912, and moved with his family to
Huntington, West Virginia as a child. His father ran a grocery store there, and when the Great Depression occurred, Ginsburg saw first-hand the effects that poverty had on families who were forced to cut back on their purchases. Recalling this era more than sixty years later, Ginsburg said that what affected him the most was what was happening to "the children. They were literally starving to death." He graduated from
West Virginia University in 1932, having financed his education by winning typing contests and a debate scholarship, and earned his law degree from
Harvard Law School in 1935. After graduating from law school, he found a position at the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, with the assistance of
Felix Frankfurter, interrupted by a one-year-long Supreme Court clerkship with
Associate Justice William O. Douglas. During
World War II, Ginsburg served on the staff of the
Office of Price Administration from 1941 until his resignation in 1943, where his hires included
Richard Nixon, who had just graduated from the
Duke University School of Law. When he then sought to join the Army during the war, he was criticized for attempting to use influence to obtain a commission as an officer. However, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt came to his support, writing that "When the political storms blow over . . . David’s patriotic, unselfish and distinguished service to his country will be duly recognized." Ultimately, Ginsburg enlisted as a private in the
United States Army, where he drove trucks for a supply unit. He later earned the rank of captain and served on the staff of General
Lucius D. Clay, the
Military Governor of the U.S. Occupation Zone in Germany. There, he provided guidance in the rebuilding and reconstruction of the German economy and attended portions of the
Nuremberg Trials and the
Potsdam Conference. ==Legal career==