When the legal profession was opened to women in England by the
Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act (1919), Cobb joined the
Middle Temple on 2 January 1920, eleven days after the Act came into force and ten days after
Helena Normanton became the first woman to do so. She returned to University College to study for an
LLB. She excelled in her first year, obtaining a First Class in Real Property and Conveyancing and winning the Hume Scholarship, and passed the
bar examination in October 1921. The next year, she was thought to be the first English woman to appear in a murder trial. Her early career comprised criminal cases, but she later had a successful practice in commercial law. She registered for a PhD in 1925, but instead decided to remain in her profession after being appointed deputy chairman of London’s
Court of Referees, where she heard cases under the
Unemployment Insurance Act. She publicly recounted the difficulty of witnesses in deciding how to address her, an anecdote that was picked up by global newspapers: Miss Monica Cobb, one of the foremost of English women barristers, said that she was sometimes addressed as 'madam,' but more often she was addressed as 'sir' and she had even been called 'my lady.' One kind, motherly old lady, she added, had solved the difficulty by calling Miss Cobb 'my dear'. == Death ==