For T14 law school admissions, pretty much any core major will work, as long as you get really good grades. In terms of law school preparation, anything where you do a lot of difficult reading and some writing is obviously good, including History.
In terms of colleges with good law school placement, you have a lot of choices. Not surprisingly, there is a lot of overlap in terms of per capita placement in the most competitive business positions and T14 law schools. I note this is not necessarily indicative of value added–the sorts of people who want those placements and are generally good students go to a lot of the same colleges, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the college they chose made that happen for those people.
Anyway, not needing an undergraduate business program means you actually have a huge range of choices. In fact if you look at per capita T14 lists, you will typically see a lot of stand-alone liberal arts colleges mixed in with the LACs embedded in research universities:
A lot of these also showed up on the IB list too. And just like with the IB list, publics tend to feature much higher on the total list, and simple per capita not really controlling properly for different self-selection at privates versus publics.
Given that you have a wide range of good choices, you would need some other filtering mechanisms. Like, do you have a preference between standalone LACs, medium-sized colleges inside private universities, or large colleges inside public universities? And there are some variations on these combinations too.
How about region? Setting (urban, near-urban, small town, rural)? Culture/vibe?
You can afford to be pretty specific in at least one or two of these areas, because that will likely still leave many reach/target/likely options to consider.