In 1964 she entered the field of law and graduated in 1967 with a law degree from the University College of London, following which she was called to the St. Kitts Bar. The write-up in the brochure stated that Ms. Lake’s “history is interwoven with the history of Anguilla. Her first three years out of law school were Anguilla’s first three years of secession from St. Kitts-Nevis. After those three years in which she honed her legal skills in tense and volatile circumstances, as an Anguillian living and working in a country which her native country had just rejected, she moved to Antigua and joined the Chambers of Cosmos Phillips with whom she worked for about one year. In April 1971 she boldly hung up her shingle and never looked back.”
The rest of biographical notes continued as follows: “Dame Bernice Lake’s career [was] distinguished by two major themes: commitment to securing a climate of constitutionalism in her region, and the protection of human rights and women rights. She was the chief architect of the Anguilla Constitution in 1975 and a member of the team which framed the Constitution of Antigua and Barbuda in 1981. She has always been very active in her communities of Anguilla, Antigua, St. Kitts and Nevis. She spearheaded Justice Corps in Anguilla, Antigua and St. Kitts and Nevis which provided free legal service to safeguard against constitutional violation of the peoples of those territories.
“Dame Bernice Lake’s history is also tied to the history of Antigua as almost everyone remembers that in 1981, on the first working day after the Independence holiday, she applied to have the son of a leading politician committed to prison for ignoring a four-year civil judgment. Her history became the history of the Caribbean Indies when in 1985 she was appointed Queens Counsel, becoming the first female in the Eastern Caribbean and, by all accounts, the first University of the West Indies graduate to be elevated to “take silk” as a Queens Counsel (QC).
“In 2004, at the 23rd Anniversary of Independence, the Government of Antigua and Barbuda, in recognition of her outstanding contribution to the legal field, her stance on women issues, civil and political rights and her personal integrity, conferred upon the then Miss Bernice Lake, QC, the prestigious title of Dame. On that occasion she was quoted as saying: ‘while a person does a particular work because of a feeling of being driven to do it, any public appreciation for work honestlyand sincerely done is always appreciated.’
“On October 27, 2007, she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Law Degree from the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados. This distinction is granted to acclaimed individuals who have also demonstrated scholastic excellence in their professional life, while maintaining exemplary ethical standards in every aspect of their existence.”
The biographical notes added that although Dame Lake’s beloved Anguilla was constitutionally “a British Overseas Territory, it is a different society to the imperial power, and requires its own definition of its identity and she has worked tirelessly to this end.”