John Carter Rose

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Carter Rose (born April 27, 1861 in Baltimore , Maryland , †  March 26, 1927 in Atlantic City , New Jersey ) was an American lawyer . After his first appointment by President William Howard Taft , he served as a federal judge from until 1910 until his death in 1927 . First he was a member of the federal district court for the district of Maryland, then from 1922 the federal appeals court for the fourth district.

Career

After attending school, John Rose graduated from the University of Maryland in Baltimore and obtained a Bachelor of Laws from its School of Law in 1882 . He then started working as a lawyer in his hometown. At the same time he became a columnist for the Baltimore Sun operates. In 1890 he served as an inspector for the United States Census in Maryland. From 1898 he held the office of federal attorney for the district of Maryland. In this role he was followed by John Philip Hill .

On March 25, 1910, Rose was appointed judge of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland by President Taft ; so he took over a previously newly established seat. Confirmation by the United States Senate took place on April 4 of the same year, whereupon he took office immediately. On 20 December 1922 he moved - this time on appeal by President Warren G. Harding eleven days earlier - to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit , which for the states of Maryland, North Carolina , South Carolina , Virginia and West Virginia in charge is. Here he also took over a new seat. A first nomination on November 27 of the same year passed without a Senate vote. He died on March 26, 1927 in Atlantic City; its seat then fell to Elliott Northcott . John Rose was buried in Loudon Park Cemetery , Baltimore.

Web links

Wikisource: John Carter Rose  - Sources and full texts (English)