American judge
This article is about the American jurist and politician. For the American lawyer and real-estate developer, see
Til Hazel
. For the Scottish footballer, see
John Hazel (footballer)
.
John R. Hazel
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In office
June 5, 1900 ? March 5, 1931
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Appointed by
| William McKinley
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Preceded by
| Seat established by 31 Stat. 175
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Succeeded by
| John Knight
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In office
1899
|
Preceded by
| Harry W. Brendel
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Succeeded by
| John N. Scratcherd
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Born
| John Raymond Hazel
(
1860-12-18
)
December 18, 1860
Buffalo, New York
, US
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Died
| October 31, 1951
(1951-10-31)
(aged 90)
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Education
| read law
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John Raymond Hazel
(December 18, 1860 ? October 31, 1951) was a
United States district judge
of the
United States District Court for the Western District of New York
. He is notable for administering the oath of office to President
Theodore Roosevelt
following the assassination and subsequent death of President
William McKinley
.
Education and career
[
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]
Born on December 18, 1860, in
Buffalo, New York
, Hazel
read law
in 1882. He entered private practice in Buffalo from 1882 to 1894. He was Commissioner of Corporation Taxes for the State of New York starting in 1894.
[1]
He was a delegate to the
1900 Republican National Convention
.
[2]
Federal judicial service
[
edit
]
Hazel was nominated by President
William McKinley
on May 18, 1900, to the
United States District Court for the Western District of New York
, to a new seat authorized by 31 Stat. 175. He was confirmed by the
United States Senate
on June 5, 1900, and received his commission the same day. His service terminated on March 5, 1931, due to his retirement.
[1]
Nomination controversy
[
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]
Hazel's nomination was opposed by the Buffalo Bar Association, which considered him unfit for judgeship. A group of five lawyers went to
New York City
on the association's behalf for the purpose of meeting with the Association of the Bar of the City of New York to express their opposition. Contemporaneous accounts indicate that it was a dispute between GOP boss
Thomas C. Platt
and the anti-Platt ring then prevalent in New York.
[3]
Roosevelt oath of office
[
edit
]
On September 6, 1901, President McKinley was attending the
Pan-American Exposition
in Buffalo when he
was shot
by
Leon Czolgosz
.
[
citation needed
]
Vice President Roosevelt was vacationing in
Vermont
, and traveled to Buffalo to visit McKinley in the hospital.
[
citation needed
]
It appeared that McKinley would recover, so Roosevelt went on a planned family camping and hiking trip to
Mount Marcy
in the
Adirondacks
.
[
citation needed
]
In the mountains, a runner notified him McKinley was on his death bed.
[
citation needed
]
Roosevelt pondered with his wife,
Edith
, how best to respond, not wanting to show up in Buffalo and wait on McKinley's death.
[
citation needed
]
Roosevelt was
rushed by a series of stagecoaches
to
North Creek train station
.
[
citation needed
]
At the station, Roosevelt was handed a telegram that said President McKinley died at 2:30 AM, September 14, 1901.
[
citation needed
]
The new President continued by train from
North Creek
to Buffalo.
[
citation needed
]
He arrived in Buffalo later that day, accepting an invitation to stay at the home of
Ansley Wilcox
(now the
Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site
).
[
citation needed
]
It was there, on the afternoon of September 14, 1901, that Judge Hazel administered the oath to Roosevelt.
[
citation needed
]
Notable cases
[
edit
]
In 1909, Judge Hazel issued an order cancelling the
naturalization
of Jacob A. Kersner, at the request of the
United States Attorney
's Office, and thus stripping the citizenship of his ex-wife, the Anarchist orator
Emma Goldman
, who had gained
United States citizenship
in 1887 by her marriage to Kersner.
[4]
Ten years later, in 1919, the
Wilson
Administration used Hazel's voiding of her citizenship as the basis for ruling that
Goldman could be deported to Russia
as an "alien anarchist," along with 248 other "undesirables," on the
USAT Buford
.
Judge Hazel heard the 1910 to 1913 lawsuit by the
Wright Brothers
who alleged patent infringement against manufacturer
Herring-Curtiss Company
and inventor
Glenn Curtiss
. Hazel ruled in February 1913 for the Wrights, and the U.S. Court of Appeals upheld his decision in 1914.
[5]
The decision was controversial for so favorably interpreting the uniqueness and priority of the technical achievements of the Wrights, and it has been argued that this broad interpretation of their intellectual property slowed aviation developments in the U.S.
[6]
[7]
Death
[
edit
]
Hazel died on October 13, 1951.
[1]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
John Raymond Hazel
at the
Biographical Directory of Federal Judges
, a publication of the
Federal Judicial Center
.
- ^
"The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Hayworth to Heacock"
.
politicalgraveyard.com
.
- ^
"Lawyers Oppose Hazel's Appointment," New York Times (front page) (May 30, 1900)
- ^
"Fair Use Blog ≫ Blog Archive ≫ Emma Goldman Now Alien"
.
New York Times
. April 9, 1909. p. 2.
- ^
Head, James. 2008.
Warped Wings
. Mustang, Oklahoma, U.S.: Tate Publishing.
- ^
Shulman, Seth.
Unlocking the Sky: Glenn Hammond Curtiss and the Race to Invent the Airplane
. New York:
HarperCollins
, 2002.
ISBN
0-06-019633-5
.
- ^
Levine, David
; Michele Boldrin (2008).
Against intellectual monopoly
. Cambridge University Press.
ISBN
978-0-521-87928-6
.
Sources
[
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]