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  1. www.jstor.org › stable › 20021936Horace Gray on JSTOR

    Francis C. Lowell, Horace Gray, Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Vol. 39, No. 24 (Jun., 1904), pp. 627-637

  2. Horace Gray (29 November 1874 – 21 January 1938) was an English first-class cricketer, educator and clergyman. The son of William Wythers Gray, he was born in the Cambridge suburb of Chesterton . He was educated in Cambridge at The Perse School , before going up to Jesus College, Cambridge . [1]

  3. Boston, Mass. Horace Gray (1828-1902) was an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. He joined the court in 1881 following a nomination from President Chester Arthur. He served until his death on September 15, 1902. Prior to joining the court, Gray served as the Chief Justice for the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. [1]

  4. In a vault hidden away in a downtown Boston bank rests a large silver loving cup. The cup was presented to Associate Justice Horace Gray on March 22, 1902 by his law clerks, and engraved on its tarnished surface are the names of the nineteen Harvard Law School graduates who served as Justice Gray’s law clerks. While the details surrounding the presentation of the cup have been lost to ...

  5. When Horace Alfred Gray 3rd was born on 27 August 1937, in Virginia, United States, his father, Horace Alfred Gray Jr, was 27 and his mother, Mary Catherine Whittet, was 26. He married Louise Wise Lewis on 17 June 1960, in Richmond, Virginia, United States. He lived in Waverly District, Sussex, Virginia, United States in 1940.

  6. Gray, Horace. Born March 24, 1828, in Boston, MA Died September 15, 1902, in Nahant, MA Federal Judicial Service: Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States Nominated by Chester A. Arthur on December 19, 1881, to a seat vacated by Nathan Clifford. Confirmed by the Senate on December 20, 1881, and received commission on December 20, 1881.

  7. Horace Montgomery Gray came to the University of Illinois in 1920 as an undergraduate student, where he would complete his B.A. , M.A. , and Ph.D. degrees. In 1923, he would join the faculty of the Department of Economics, becoming as a foremost authority in the fields of Transportation and Public Utilities. Professor Gray was a contemporary of ...