born April 11, 1862, Glens Falls, N.Y., U.S.
died Aug. 27, 1948, Osterville, Mass.
U.S. jurist and statesman.
He became prominent in 1905 as counsel to New York legislative committees investigating abuses in the life insurance and utilities industries. His two terms as governor of New York (1906–10) were marked by extensive reform. He was appointed to the Supreme Court of the United States in 1910 but resigned in 1916 to run as the Republican presidential candidate. After losing the election to Herbert Hoover . He led the court through the great controversies arising out the New Deal legislation of Pres. Franklin Roosevelt . Although generally favouring the exercise of government power, he spoke for the court in invalidating (in Schechter Poultry Corp. v. U.S. ) a principal New Deal statute, and he attacked Roosevelt's court-packing plan (1937). He wrote the opinion sustaining {{link=collective bargaining">collective bargaining under the Wagner Act . He served until 1941.