Hardy Cross Dillard was the son of Avarene Lippincot Budd and
James Hardy Dillard, an educator who devoted his life to the education of African Americans and former Dean of
Tulane University. Hardy Cross Dillard was also cousin of civil engineer
Hardy Cross – originator of the
Hardy Cross method. Dillard attended the
Virginia Episcopal School and later the
U.S. Military Academy where he graduated in 1924. Upon graduation, Dillard was commissioned a second lieutenant in the
Infantry. However, with the
First World War fading in to the background, fresh West Point graduates were encouraged to leave the service. Thus, like many of his classmates, Dillard resigned his
commission two months after graduation. He subsequently entered the
University of Virginia Law School and served on the editorial board of the
Virginia Law Review and was also president of the law school student body. Due to his legal ability, the law faculty took the unusual step of asking him to stay after graduation to serve as an instructor. He taught primarily
international law for two years before leaving to become an associate in the New York City law firm of Gregg & Church. After only a year with the law firm, he was awarded a fellowship by the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace to study international law at the
University of Paris. Upon completion of the program, Dillard accepted an appointment as assistant professor of law at the
University of Virginia. He returned to New York City in the summers of 1932 and 1933 and worked as an associate at
Davis, Polk, Wardwell, Gardiner and Reed. In 1934 he became the university's director of Institute of Public Affairs – an assignment in addition to his law duties. The institute brought prominent speakers to the university from government, business and academia to discuss topics of national and international interest. As the director, Dillard became acquainted with some of the leading figures of the day such as Senator
Robert A. Taft, Supreme Court Justice
Robert Jackson, Ambassador
Paul V McNutt,
Owen Lattimore,
Thurman Arnold,
Max Lerner,
David Sarnoff,
Rexford Guy Tugwell,
Major George Fielding Eliot,
Max Eastman,
Quincy Howe, and
William L. Shirer. Dillard, however, drew controversy by inviting
communists such as
Earl Browder to speak. A former president of the university's Alumni Association protested in a letter to the Alumni News that Dillard went "beyond freedom of speech" when he offered a rostrum from which the general secretary of the
American Communist Party and the
Soviet Ambassador could, "spread subversive doctrines." Dillard responded that where controversial topics are selected, "both sides should be fairly heard." A spokesman for
Germany was also invited to speak. ==Jurisprudence==