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・ John Jay Chapman
・ John Jay College of Criminal Justice
・ John Jay Educational Campus (Brooklyn)
・ John Jay Gergen
・ John Jay Good
・ John Jay Hall
・ John Jay High School
・ John Jay High School (Cross River, New York)
・ John Jay High School (Hopewell Junction, New York)
・ John Jay High School (San Antonio)
・ John Jay Hoffman
・ John Jay Homestead State Historic Site
・ John Jay Hooker
・ John Jay Hopkins
・ John Jay Iselin
John Jay Jackson, Jr.
・ John Jay Knox
・ John Jay Lee
・ John Jay O'Connor
・ John Jay Osborn, Jr.
・ John Jay Park
・ John Jay Phelps
・ John Jay Report
・ John Jay Science and Engineering Academy
・ John Jay Shipherd
・ John Jayd Daniels
・ John Jea
・ John Jebb
・ John Jebb (bishop)
・ John Jebb (priest)


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John Jay Jackson, Jr. : ウィキペディア英語版
John Jay Jackson, Jr.

John Jay Jackson, Jr. (August 4, 1824 – September 2, 1907) was a United States federal judge, first from Virginia, and then from West Virginia, at the time of its creation as a separate state.
==Early life and career==
Born in Parkersburg, Virginia (now Parkersburg, West Virginia),〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Parkersburg, West Virginia )〕 Jackson graduated from Princeton University in 1845, and read law to enter the Bar in Virginia in 1847. Jackson's father, General John Jay Jackson of Wood County, attended the Wheeling Convention on West Virginia statehood. Jackson's brother Jacob Beeson Jackson served as governor of West Virginia and his other brother was Circuit Judge and Congressman James Monroe Jackson. He was a cousin of Stonewall Jackson. His grandfather, John George Jackson, preceded him as judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia. His great-grandfathers included George Jackson. The Jackson Memorial Fountain at Parkersburg is dedicated to the Jackson family.
Jackson was in private practice in Wirt County, Virginia from 1847 to 1848, and a prosecuting attorney for Wirt County in 1848. He was a Commonwealth attorney of Ritchie County, Virginia from 1849 to 1850, then returned to private practice in Wood County, Virginia until 1851. He was a Member, of the Virginia House of Delegates from 1851 to 1855, and then returned to private practice, in Parkersburg until 1861.

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