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  1. Died: April 18, 1847 in New Orleans. Edward Douglass White's governorship came in the middle of Whig dominance of the office. The sugar planters of the more populous Acadian parishes supported the pro-tariff Whigs and Alexander Porter led the state Whig Party. Democratic Party enemies of White accused him of being Porter's puppet.

  2. 5 de abr. de 2004 · The White Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy examines the workings and legacies of the Supreme Court during the tenure of Chief Justice Edward Douglass White. Through detailed discussions of landmark cases, this reference work explores the role the Court played in steering the country through an era of economic growth, racial discrimination, and international warfare.

  3. Fallo White. El Fallo (o Laudo) White fue una sentencia arbitral limítrofe dictada el 12 de septiembre de 1914 por el entonces Presidente de la Corte Suprema de los Estados Unidos, Edward Douglass White, en la ciudad de Washington ( Estados Unidos) con el objetivo de resolver las diferencias limítrofes entre las Repúblicas de Costa Rica y ...

  4. EDWARD D. WHITE was born in Maury County, Tennessee on March 3, 1795. His education was attained in the Louisiana common schools and at the University of Nashville, where he graduated in 1799. He then studied law, was admitted to the bar, and established a legal practice in Donaldsonville, Louisiana. White entered public service in 1825, with ...

  5. Edward Douglass White, Jr., né le 3 novembre 1845 à Thibodaux et mort le 19 mai 1921 à Washington, est un juge et homme politique américain. Sénateur au Sénat des États-Unis pour la Louisiane (1891-1894), il a été juge assesseur de la Cour suprême des États-Unis (1894-1910) et juge en chef des États-Unis (1910-1921).

  6. We have been proudly and faithfully located in Arlington, Virginia since May 20, 1923. At that first organizational meeting at St. Charles School Hall on the 20th of May, the name of "Edward Douglass White"was chosen for the Council. In August 2020, the Knights of Columbus changed our name, temporarily to "Arlington Council 2473" until we ...

  7. Edward Douglass White's career on the Supreme Court. The future chief justice attended Catholic preparatory schools and was enrolled in Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., when the Civil War erupted. An ardent southerner, White enlisted as a private in the Confederate Army despite his family's objection that, at seventeen, he was too young for