Nathaniel Holmes (judge)
Nathaniel Holmes (January 2, 1814[1] or July 2, 1814[2] or July 2, 1815[3] in Peterborough, New Hampshire— February 26[1] or March 26,[4] 1901 in Cambridge, Massachusetts) was an American jurist who served on the Supreme Court of Missouri from 1865 to 1868.
Early life
Holmes' parents were both the children of immigrants, with his father's father being from
Career
Holmes began practicing law in
In 1865, the Ousting Ordinance removed all judges in Missouri from office,[5] and Thomas Clement Fletcher appointed Holmes to fill one of the newly-vacated seats on the state Supreme Court.[4]
In 1867, the University of Missouri appointed him a Professor of Law; however, he did not teach any courses.[3] In 1868, he resigned from the court, and returned to Harvard Law School, where he served as Royall Professor of Law. In 1872, he resigned from Harvard and returned to St. Louis, where he practiced law until 1883, at which point he retired and returned to Cambridge, where he died in 1901.[1]
Other activities
Holmes was an early proponent of the idea that Francis Bacon wrote the works attributed to William Shakespeare, and in 1866 published a 600-page book, The Authorship of Shakespeare, in support of this.[1][3]
References
- ^ Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, vol. 36, no. 29, 1901, pp. 552–53; retrieved April 10, 2024
- ^ JUDGE NATHANIEL HOLMES, in Saint Louis: the future great city of the world.; by L. U. Reavis; p. 532; published 1875 by Gray, Baker & Co; via the Library of Congress
- ^ a b c d e "The Judges", in The Missouri Supreme Court Historical Journal; vol. 1, no. 1, Spring 1986; p. 6; published by the Missouri Supreme Court Historical Society
- ^ a b c d e "Judge Nathaniel Holmes", by Matt Orf; at the Supreme Court of Missouri; published 2017
- Saint Louis University Law Journal; volume 43, number 4, article 17; p. 1412 (p. 19 of the .pdf); at Saint Louis University