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・ Robert H. Gundry
・ Robert H. Harris
・ Robert H. Harrison
・ Robert H. Hatton
・ Robert H. Hayes
・ Robert H. Hewsen
・ Robert H. Hinckley
・ Robert H. Hodges, Jr.
・ Robert H. Hodsden
・ Robert H. Holmes
・ Robert H. Hotchkiss
・ Robert H. Hudson
・ Robert H. Hume
・ Robert H. Hunt
・ Robert H. Ingersoll
Robert H. Jackson
・ Robert H. Jackson (photographer)
・ Robert H. Jackson Center
・ Robert H. Jackson United States Courthouse
・ Robert H. Jeffrey
・ Robert H. Jenkins, Jr.
・ Robert H. Johns
・ Robert H. Johnson
・ Robert H. Justman
・ Robert H. Kennedy
・ Robert H. Kittleman
・ Robert H. Knight
・ Robert H. Krieble
・ Robert H. Lee
・ Robert H. Liebeck


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Robert H. Jackson : ウィキペディア英語版
Robert H. Jackson

Robert Houghwout Jackson (February 13, 1892 – October 9, 1954) was United States Solicitor General (1938-1940), United States Attorney General (1940–1941) and an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (1941–1954). He is the only person in United States history to have held all three of those offices. He was also the chief United States prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials. A "county-seat lawyer", he remains the last Supreme Court justice appointed who did not graduate from any law school (though Justice Stanley Reed who served from 1938 to 1957 was the last such justice to serve on the court), although he did attend Albany Law School in Albany, New York for one year. He is remembered for his famous advice that "any lawyer worth his salt will tell the suspect in no uncertain terms to make no statement to the police under any circumstances"〔''(Watts v. Indiana )'', 338 U.S. 49, 59.〕 and for his aphorism describing the Supreme Court, "We are not final because we are infallible, but we are infallible only because we are final."〔''(Brown v. Allen )'', 344 U.S. 443.〕 Many lawyers revere Justice Jackson as one of the best writers on the court, and one of the most committed to due process protections from overreaching federal agencies.
==Early life==
Born on a family farm in Spring Creek Township, Warren County, Pennsylvania and raised in Frewsburg, New York, Jackson graduated from Frewsburg High School in 1909 and spent the next year as a post-graduate student attending Jamestown High School in Jamestown, New York where he came under the tutelage of teachers such as Mary Willard and Milton Fletcher, two teachers that inspired his love of writing and literature. Jackson did not attend college.
At age 18, he went to work as an apprentice in a two-lawyer Jamestown law office with his uncle, Frank Mott who was a lawyer in Jamestown. Frank Mott introduced him to Franklin Delano Roosevelt when FDR was a young New York Senator. FDR served as a reference for Jackson in the New York Democratic party.
Robert H. Jackson then attended Albany Law School, in Albany, New York during 1911–12. Although Jackson completed the second year of the School's two-year program, it denied him a law degree because he was under age twenty-one.
During the summer of 1912, Jackson returned to Jamestown. He apprenticed again for the next year. He passed the New York bar examination in 1913 and joined a law practice in Jamestown, New York.
In 1916, he married Irene Alice Gerhardt in Albany. In 1917, Jackson was recruited to practice law in Buffalo, New York. He worked for Penney, Killeen & Nye, a leading Buffalo law firm located in the Ellicott Square building, primarily defending the International Railway Company in trials and appeals. In Buffalo, the Jacksons lived at 49 Johnson Park (the Lyndhaven apartment building). In late 1918, Jackson was recruited back to Jamestown to serve as the city's corporation counsel.
Over the next 15 years, he built a very successful private law practice, becoming a leading lawyer in New York State and, through practice and bar association activities, a prominent young lawyer nationally. In 1930, Jackson was elected to membership in the American Law Institute. In 1933, Jackson was elected chairman of the American Bar Association's Conference of Bar Association Delegates (a predecessor to today's ABA House of Delegates).

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