Hamilton Glover Ewart
Hamilton Glover Ewart (1849-1918) was a federal judge on the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina.[1]
He received a recess appointment from President William McKinley on July 13, 1898 and was nominated on December 13th. But he was not confirmed by the Senate, so his service ended on March 3, 1899.[1]
Hamilton Ewart was given another chance on April 13, 1899, when he received a second recess appointment from President McKinley. He was nominated on December 19, 1899, but the Senate once again refused to confirm him and his service ended on June 7, 1900.[1] Ewart died on April 28, 1918.
Education
- University of South Carolina, LL.B., 1876[1]
Professional career
- Referee in Bankruptcy, U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, 1872-
- Mayor, Hendersonville, North Carolina, 1878-1879
- North Carolina state representative, 1887-1889
- U.S. Representative from North Carolina, 1889-1891
- Criminal court judge, Henderson County, North Carolina, 1895-1896
- North Carolina state representative, 1895-1897
- Circuit court judge, Raleigh, North Carolina, 1897-1898
- North Carolina state representative, 1911-1913
- Private practice, Hendersonville, North Carolina (no dates)
- Private practice, Chicago, Illinois, 1916-1918[1]
External links
- Biography from the website "Infoplease".
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Judge Ewart's Biography from the Federal Judicial Center.
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1897 | |||
1898 | |||
1899 |
Barnard • Clabaugh • Day • Evans • Fischer • Gray • Grosscup • Hook • Howell • Kohlsaat • McPherson • Shelby | ||
1900 |
Boyd • De Vries • Hazel • McPherson • Severens • Trieber • Wanty | ||
1901 |
Adams • Anderson • Archbald • Cochran • Humphrey • Keller • Wing |