Julius Marshuetz Mayer

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Julius Marshuetz Mayer

Julius Marshuetz Mayer (born September 5, 1865 in New York City , † November 20, 1925 ibid) was an American lawyer and politician ( Republican Party ).

Career

Nothing is known about Julius Marshuetz Mayer's youth. He graduated from City College of New York . Then he studied law at Columbia Law School . After receiving his license to practice law, he opened a law practice in New York . In addition to his work as a lawyer, he also worked as a consultant for various government agencies. Mayor Seth Low called him to the Court of Special Sessions in January 1902 to fill a vacancy. In July 1903 he was reappointed for a full ten-year term, but resigned from his post on December 30, 1903 to resume his legal practice.

In the 1904 election he was elected Attorney General of New York. He then held the post from 1905 to 1906. In his re-election in 1906, however, he suffered a defeat against the Democrat William S. Jackson . In 1904 and 1908 he participated as a delegate at the Republican National Conventions .

US President William Howard Taft appointed him in 1912 to succeed George Bethune Adams as judge at the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York . In 1921, President Warren G. Harding appointed him as an appellate judge to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ; here he succeeded Henry Galbraith Ward . Mayer only served in the 2nd District Court for three years. He resigned from his post as a judge on July 31, 1924 and resumed his legal practice.

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