In 1904, LSU constitutional law professor
Arthur T. Prescott, who earlier had been the founding president of
Louisiana Tech University, became the first to propose the establishment of a law school at LSU. The law school came to fruition in 1906, under LSU president
Thomas Duckett Boyd, with nineteen founding students. Since 1924, the LSU Law Center has been a member of the Association of American Law Schools and approved by the American Bar Association. The Law Center was renamed in honor of Dean
Paul M. Hebert (1907–1977), the longest serving Dean of the LSU Law School, who served in that role with brief interruptions from 1937 until his death in 1977. One of these interruptions occurred in 1947–1948, when he was appointed as a judge for the
United States Military Tribunals in Nuremberg. ==Demographics==