Viewing Lawyers Category (13) found:Cushman Kellogg Davis: "Cross Examination." (1907)Before he became a U. S. Senator, Cushman Kellogg Davis was a renowned trial lawyer in Minnesota. When compiling "Tact in Court," a book on trial practice, Joseph Wesley Donovan, who was a circuit court judge in Detroit, asked Senator Davis for his advice. Davis's reply appears in "Cross-Examination," a chapter in the sixth edition which was published in 1907. Eugene M. Wilson (1833-1890)Eugene McLanahan Wilson was a prominent lawyer in Minneapolis from the end of the Civil War to his death in 1890. He served in Congress from 1869 to 1871, as mayor of Minneapolis from 1872 to 1876, and as a state senator in 1878-1879. George F. Hoar: "Cushman Kellogg Davis." (1903)Cushman K. Davis served as U. S. Senator from Minnesota from 1887 to November 27, 1900, when he died in St. Paul. In his memoirs, "Autobiography of Seventy Years," published in 1903, Senator George F. Hoar of Massachusetts reprinted a lengthy tribute to Davis. Roger G. Kennedy: "Frank Billings Kellogg." (1969)Frank Billings Kellogg (1856-1937) was a named partner in Minnesota's first nationally prominent law firm, Davis, Kellogg and Severance, a famous "trust buster" under President Theodore Roosevelt, a United States Senator from 1917 to 1923, Secretary of State in the Coolidge Administration, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for 1929, and a justice on the World Court. But in this biographical portrait by Roger G. Kennedy, he is depicted as an unimaginative but always adaptable lawyer who rose from an impoverished boyhood to great wealth, a politician who abandoned the very types of farmers and small town businessmen he grew up with, at a time when they were in need of government assistance, and a statesman, celebrated in his own time, but who today is assessed in less than heroic terms. Seeking to reveal the personality and character of Kellogg, Kennedy's profile of him is impressionistic, insightful, rarely complimentary, and oftentimes simply scathing. This article appeared first as a chapter in Kennedy's "Men on the Moving Frontier: From Wilderness to Civilization, The Romance, Realism, and Life-Styles of One Part of the American West," published in 1969. Roger G. Kennedy is the Former Director of the U. S. National Park Service, and Director Emeritus, of the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. He received his LL.D. from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1952. Morris A. Bennett (1833-1861)Morris A. Bennett died in Winona on April 23, 1861, at the age of 28. Articles about him appeared in the "Winona Daily Republican" on April 23 and 24, 1861. Abner Lewis (1801-1879)In 1856, fifty-five year old Abner Lewis, a former judge in Chautauqua County, New York, moved to Winona to practice law. After his death on October 11, 1879, his obituary appeared in the "Winona Daily Republican." "Melville & Mason: The First Law Firm in Fergus Falls." (1916)Bert Melville and John W. Mason formed the first law firm in Fergus Falls on July 5, 1871. Their partnership agreement stated that it would be in existence for one year. In fact, it lasted only a few weeks. Interestingly, at a time when lawyers routinely engaged in business activities in addition to their law practice, the Melville & Mason partnership agreement affirmed that the two partners would "engage strictly in the practice of law." This item appeared in a history of Otter Tail County edited by John Mason and published in 1916. James Grafton Rogers: "Frank Billings Kellogg." (1932)Frank Billings Kellogg (1856-1937) was the 35th President of the American Bar Association, serving in 1912-1913, nine years before his partner, Cordenio Severance, held that office.
James Grafton Rogers: "Cordenio Arnold Severance." (1932)Cordenio Arnold Severance (1862-1925) was the 44th President of the American Bar Association. He served in 1921-1922, only nine years after his law partner, Frank B. Kellogg, held that office.
Douglas A. Hedin: "Lawyers and 'Booster Literature' in the Early Territorial Period" (2008)On June 21, 1851, the "St. Anthony Express" published an editorial, "Who are Wanted in Minnesota," in which it promoted the Territory of Minnesota and described the types of settlers who were wanted there--farmers, mechanics, ministers, young ladies, and lawyers.
Lafayette French, Sr. (1848-1912) & Lafayette French, Jr. (1887-1948)Lafayette French built a towering reputation as a trial lawyer in southern Minnesota from the 1870s to his death in 1912. He was President of the Minnesota State Bar Association in 1909. His son, Lafayette French II, followed him into the law, and served as United States Attorney from 1923 through 1928. He later returned to Austin and practiced law until his death in 1944.
Gilbert J. Clark: "Cushman Kellogg Davis." (1895).In 1895, Gilbert Clark, a Kansas City lawyer, published "Life Sketches of Eminent Lawyers," a two volume set of short profiles of 146 famous lawyers and judges. Cushman Kellogg Davis, then in his second term as U. S. Senator, was one of those "sketched" by Clark. The Dorsett CaseOn January 11, 1878, Martha Angle Dorsett became the first woman to be admitted to the bar of Minnesota. This posting contains contemporary newspaper articles about her and her struggle to be admitted as well as Thomas A. Woxland's article, "In re Dorsett: Opening the Minnesota Bar to Women," published first in the November 1990 issue of "Bench & Bar of Minnesota." |