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Topic: Henry Baldwin (judge)


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  Henry Baldwin (judge) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Baldwin (January 14, 1780 - April 21, 1844) was an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from January 18, 1830, to April 21, 1844.
In 1797 (at the age of 17) Baldwin received a doctor of laws degree from Yale University.
Baldwin’s actions on the courts were part of the end of the Marshall era.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Henry_Baldwin_(judge)   (321 words)

  
 Baldwin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Baldwin Street in Dunedin (New Zealand), is world's steepest street, with a maximum slope of 38%.
Baldwin Locomotive Works, one of the world's largest builders of steam locomotives in the 19th and early 20th century.
Baldwin Piano is the largest manufacturer of pianos and keyboard instruments in the United States.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Baldwin   (502 words)

  
 Judge John T. Allen   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Judge Allen was born in 1862 at Mt. Zion in Hancock County, son of James Troup Allen and Temperance Moran Allen from Hancock County.
Judge Allen represented Baldwin County in the house and senate.
Judge Allen died July 12, 1930 and is buried at Memory Hill Cemetery along side his wife Hattie Allen who died March 12, 1922.
www.usgennet.org /usa/ga/county/baldwin/judgeallen.html   (180 words)

  
 The My Hero Project - Roger Nash Baldwin
Baldwin said later that he got his "first impulse to civil liberties" during this period when the police denied Margaret Sanger, the birth-control advocate, the right to hold a meeting in a public hall.
Baldwin's stance earned praise from many liberal organizations, and Emma Goldman said he "has proved himself the most consistent of us all." The socialist leader Norman Thomas said that the hearing "was one of the rare experiences of a lifetime." Baldwin's time in jail was relatively pleasant, and he turned it to his advantage.
Baldwin was not a religious man. Nevertheless, he viewed the Sermon on the Mount as an extraordinary declaration of humanity.
myhero.com /myhero/hero.asp?hero=rogerbaldwin   (1770 words)

  
 Woburnites -  The Family of Baldwin
Baldwin befriended him when arrested by one of the local military companies as a person inimical to the cause of the colonies, and he was tried and acquitted by a court of which Baldwin appears to be one of the members.
Henry (2) was succeeded in ownership by James (9), who died June 28, 1791, and son of Henry (2); Loammi, son of James, to 1807, who put on a third story in 1802 or 1803.
Baldwin was connected in regard to many others, from a dam at Augusta, Maine, to a marine railway at Pensacola, from the construction of buildings at Harvard College, to a canal around the falls of the Ohio river, from a stone bridge called the Warren Bridge at Charlestown to the Harrisburg Canal in Pennsylvania.
www.yeoldewoburn.net /Baldwin.htm   (8826 words)

  
 Misc. Biograhies Baldwin County GA
Biographies, Baldwin County, Ga Judge of the county court, Milledgeville, Baldwin co. James Troup Allen, was born at Mt. Zion, Hancock county, Oct. 21, 1861.
Judge Allen was raised on the farm, and received such education as the near by schools could give, and in 1880, when the middle Georgia military institute opened its doors a Milledgeville, he entered that institution, graduating from it in 1883.
JUDGE LUCIUS Q. was a son of John Lamar and was born July 15, 1797, and from boyhood was a lover of books, reading with good effect almost everything that came within his reach, but had a decided partiality to poetry and other works of imagination.
www.usgennet.org /usa/ga/county/baldwin/bios.html   (6207 words)

  
 BALDWIN NE Family - Sherm Thompson's Research Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Obadiah BALDWIN was born 19 Oct 1660 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, and died 8 Jan 1737/38 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut.
Richard BALDWIN was born 10 Jun 1666 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, and died 25 Dec 1742 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut.
Josiah BALDWIN was born 20 Mar 1641/42 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut, and died 2 Nov 1683 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut.
members.aol.com /Yaxleyman/baldwin.htm   (2288 words)

  
 Judge Henry R. Selden   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
HENRY R. Henry Rogers Selden was born of Puritan stock at Lyme, Connecticut, October 14, 1805.
Henry R. Selden was one of the men who advanced the money with which Morse and Vail were able to push the telegraph to success.
Judge Selden was one of the organizers of the Republican party, and in 1856 was its candidate for Lieutenant Governor of New York with John A. King as candidate for Governor.
www.vintageviews.org /vv-tl/Photos/pages/seldon-h.html   (455 words)

  
 Highbeam Encyclopedia - Search Results for Judge   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Judges JUDGES [Judges] book of the Bible, seventh book of the Old Testament in the order of the Authorized Version.
Eddie Judge was an average athlete until he found cross country.
Judge's removal from case is reversed: President judge vacates previous order to keep Judge Ann Lokuta from divorce case.
www.encyclopedia.com /SearchResults.aspx?Q=Judge&StartAt=31   (740 words)

  
 The History of Baldwin Township from 1843
The land was named for Henry Baldwin, a justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court from 1830 to 1844.
Baldwin Township would have a population of 100,000, second to Pittsburgh in the county, if all the areas that left in the last sixty years were intact today.
Baldwin Township, Baldwin Borough and Whitehall Borough are in the Baldwin-Whitehall School District.
www.southhillspittsburgh.org /history1.htm   (2339 words)

  
 Henry Baldwin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Baldwin (judge) (1780–1844), an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court
Henry P. Baldwin (1814–1892), a U.S. Senator from Michigan
Henry Baldwin (judge) (1780-1844), a U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Henry_Baldwin   (129 words)

  
 1888 History of the Crawford County Bar   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
In 1830 was appointed a judge of the supreme court of the United States, and held the office until his death in 1844.
He was elected additional law judge in 1856, for ten years, and discharged the duties of his office ably and in a manner satisfactory to the public.
He was appointed by the governor judge of the supreme court, to fill the vacancy in consequence of the resignation of Judge Porter.
www.crawfordcopa.com /history/1888/Bar.html   (2363 words)

  
 Raymond Earl Baldwin
Baldwin collaborated with others in the party who called themselves "New Republicans" and was nominated to run for governor as a reform candidate.
Baldwin had planned to retire from politics when his term ended in January of 1947, but in 1946 he was convinced by his party to run for the US Senate.
Baldwin was a member of the Connecticut State Library Committee and its successor, the State Library Board, from 1957-1982 and served as its chair for many years.
www.cslib.org /gov/baldwinr.htm   (1299 words)

  
 History of Western District of Pennsylvania
Judges of the Court of Appeals sit, with Judges of the District Court, in proceedings in the District Courts where an injunction is sought on Federal constitutional grounds against the enforcement of a State statute or an Act of Congress on the ground that it is repugnant to the United States Constitution.
Henry Baldwin was born in Connecticut in 1780.
Judge Standish is a Trustee of the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf and the YMCA of Sewickley, and he is a former Trustee of the Staunton Farm Foundation.
www.pawd.uscourts.gov /Documents/General/history.htm   (9643 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Baldwin
Son of Henry Baldwin and Theodora (Wolcott) Baldwin; half-brother of Abraham Baldwin.
Judge of U.S. District Court for Montana, 1935-44; died in office 1944.
Judge of U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, 1982-86; took senior status 1986.
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/baldwin.html   (1468 words)

  
 O.Henry
Judge Derwent receives a letter from an ex-convict, in which the writer, 'Rattlesnake' threatens his daughter and the district attorney, Littlefield.
Henry's best known work is perhaps the much anthologized 'The Ransom of Red Chief' (see Howard Hawks and Nunnally Johnson), published in the collection Whirligigs in 1910.
Henry died of cirrhosis of the liver on June 5, 1910, in New York.
www.kirjasto.sci.fi /ohenry.htm   (1228 words)

  
 Judge Henry OLIN   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Henry Olin was born in Shaftsbury, May 7, 1768.
He was first chosen an assistant judge of the County Court in 1801, which office he held eight, and that of chief judge fifteen years, making twenty-three years of uninterrupted service upon the bench.
Judge Olin was twice married, first in 1788, to Lois Richardson, one of a family of twelve children, who all lived to mature age, and were all members of a Baptist Church in the east part of Cheshire, Mass.
home.earthlink.net /~jeffreyolin/id13.html   (490 words)

  
 Supreme Court
He served as a justice of the peace and as a judge of probates in the region of Massachusetts now known as Maine, but he seemed incapable of making decisions, which is a necessary condition of judging.
Henry Baldwin was an American judge who was an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1830-1844).
Henry Baldwin was elected to the first of three terms as the representative for Pennsylvania in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1816 (to 1822).
members.tripod.com /edward_weigert/supreme_court.htm   (5172 words)

  
 Guide to the Baldwin Family Papers : Finding Aid
Ebenezer Baldwin (1745-1776) graduated from Yale University in 1763, served as a tutor from 1767-1770, and held the position of minister in the First Congregational Church in Danbury, Connecticut from 1770-1776.
Simeon Eben Baldwin (1840-1927) graduated from Yale University in 1861, became a member of the bar in 1863, and was founder of the American Bar Association in 1878 and it's president in 1890.
Henry De Forest Baldwin (1862-1947) graduated from Yale University in 1885 and was admitted to the bar in 1887.
mssa.library.yale.edu /findaids/stream.php?xmlfile=mssa.ms.0055.xml   (1415 words)

  
 48th OVVI - William H. Baldwin
WILLIAM HENRY BALDWIN was born in 1832 in New Sharon, Maine.
Baldwin was the commader of the 83rd OVVI when it was consolidated with the 48th OVVI.
Baldwin, the second in command of the Greyhounds, came of a long line of military men reaching back to Bunker Hill.
www.48ovvi.org /oh48baldwin.html   (731 words)

  
 Andrew Jackson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
He was elected as Tennessee's first Congressman, upon its statehood in the late 1790s, and quickly became a U.S. Senator in 1797 but resigned within a year.
In 1798, he was appointed judge on the Tennessee Supreme Court.
Jackson denounced it as a "corrupt bargain" because Henry Clay gave his votes to Adams, who then made Clay secretary of state.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Andrew_Jackson   (4222 words)

  
 Henry Rogers Selden
Henry Rogers Selden was born in 1805 in Lyme, Connecticut.
One of their children, George Baldwin Selden (born in Clarkson on September 14, 1846) is remembered for filing the patent for "an improved road-engine" -- the gas-powered automobile.
When, on January 21, 1873, they appeared before a U.S. District Judge, Selden had supported Anthony’s demand for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging that the charges were illegal, and asked that she be discharged.
winningthevote.org /HRSelden.html   (1389 words)

  
 Delaware County, Ohio History - 1880
Preceding these a month or so, an addition was made of all the unsold Baldwin lands that lay contiguous to the north part of the town, then in the hands of Bomford and Sweetser, through the middle of which they laid out Bomford street, which was changed in 1867 to Lincoln avenue.
Baldwin represented, by power of attorney, the interests of other heirs that had not sold their share in the original property.
The spring, and the property pertaining to it, was accordingly leased to him for ninety-nine years, renewable forever, with the provision that the use of the waters should be forever free for the use of the citizens of the place.
www.heritagepursuit.com /Delaware/delchapXI.htm   (18419 words)

  
 Baldwins in Politics
Baldwin is married, and has one son and two daughters.
We are related to his father, also a President of the United States, in various other ways, but not through Henry Baldwin of Woburn.
From 1779 till his death he was judge of probate for Middlesex county.
members.tripod.com /~ntgen/bw/bpltcs.html   (698 words)

  
 The Supreme Court Historical Society
William Henry Harrison had been chosen by the Whigs as their candidate for the White House in 1840 and Tyler had been his running mate.
The fact that the vice-presidential candidate came from the opposite party and had almost completely opposite political views seemed to the strategists of the day to be a masterstroke.
Nelson, one of the best known state judges in the land, was confirmed within a week, and took his seat on the Court the day after Tyler left office.
www.supremecourthistory.org /04_library/subs_volumes/04_c02_g.html   (1716 words)

  
 OBITUARY SKETCH OF JAMES GRISWOLD
She was the widow of Simon Wolcott, Esq., and cousin of five judges of the Pitkin family, of whom three were chief justices of Connecticut, and one was a judge in Massachusetts.
She was mother of Gov. Roger Wolcott, a lawyer and judge of the Superior Court, whose wife was a granddaughter of Hon.
Two sons of Gov. Matthew and Ursula [Wolcott] Griswold were judges of the Supreme Court of Connecticut, one of whom, the famous Gov. Roger Griswold, was declared by the late Chief Justice Henry M. Waite to have been "the most brilliant man this state had ever produced." Among the descendants of Gov. Matthew and Mrs.
www.cslib.org /memorials/griswoldj.htm   (1599 words)

  
 Warren v. General Motors Corp., 142 NC App 316 (00-155) 02/20/2001
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in a negligence case arising out of an automobile accident by allowing the unnamed UIM insurance company and defendant driver to amend their answers on the first day of trial, because there was no prejudicial error when the jury found for plaintiff on those issues.
Baldwin's vehicle was then struck by a vehicle driven by defendant Linda Hyatt.
The trial judge found the probative value of the answers was substantially outweighed by the danger of prejudice and confusion of the issues by the jury, pursuant to Rule 403 of the N.C. Rules of Evidence.
www.aoc.state.nc.us /www/public/coa/opinions/2001/000155-1.htm   (1148 words)

  
 Henry Daily Herald, McDonough, GA - Stockbridge residents throw their hat into race for state superintendent   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
A substitute teacher at Red Oak Elementary School in Henry County, she said she believes there should be more funding in technical education.
And for the upcoming Democratic Primary, she is challenged by 51-year-old Denise Majette of Stone Mountain, a former judge and Congresswoman who ran unsuccessfully for U.S. Senate in 2004.
Carter holds an associate’s degree in agriculture from Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College, and a bachelor’s and master’s degree in agricultural education from the University of Georgia.
www.henryherald.com /local/local_story_167215132.html?keyword=topstory   (809 words)

  
 Touched by an Angel: Band of Angels - TV.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Henry is shocked to find Alex there and goes to call the police when Alex tries to stop him.
She tearfully recounts how her father had a lot more love and music to share and that Alex is a murderer who should be made to pay.
Monica reveals herself as an angel, and that she was sent in answer to Henry's prayer.
www.tv.com /touched-by-an-angel/band-of-angels/episode/35239/summary.html   (671 words)

  
 Delaware County, Ohio History - 1880
This was used some time as both church and schoolhouse, when Henry Cryder, removing into a new and better house, gave his old one for a schoolhouse; and John Wilson taught the first school in it.
When Judge Powell came to this city, the spring was still as nature formed it, and the campus a naked barren.
In the year 1828, Judge Henry Baldwin, of Pittsburgh, and Moses Byxbe, one of the first settlers in this locality, and proprietors of land in what is now the city of Delaware, donated four acres of land to the corporation of the village of Delaware, which included the spring and a part of the campus.
www.heritagepursuit.com /Delaware/delchapVI.htm   (6155 words)

  
 Judge Abram Baldwin OLIN   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Abraham Baldwin OLIN was born in Shaftesbury, Vt., on Sept. 21, 1808; fitted for college at the academy, at Williamstown, Mass., under the Rev. Ebenezer Canning, and graduated at Williams College as a member of the class of 1835.
In 1863, on retiring from congressional service, he was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, being one of the four judges designated to that position at the organization of the court.
In December, 1838, Judge Olin married Miss Mary Danforth, daughter of Keyes Danforth, Esq., of Williamstown.
home.earthlink.net /~jeffreyolin/id7.html   (505 words)

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