Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Only one Court of Appeals Judge has ever run for President of the United States. He lost in a landslide. Alton B. Parker was born May 14, 1852, on a modest farm just outside Cortland, New York. His father, John Brooks Parker, had also been born on the farm, which had been first purchased by his grandfather, the son of a Revolutionary War soldier.

  2. Telegram to President Roosevelt Conceding the Presidential Election. November 09, 1904. Statement Following Defeat in the Presidential Election

  3. Alton B. Parker ran on the Democratic ticket for President in 1904. Prior to campaigning for president he served on the New York Court of Appeals and the New York Supreme Court. Associated Date: 1904

  4. Alton Brooks Parker was born on May 14, 1852 in Cortland, New York. He attended Cortland Academy and Cortland Normal School, where he trained as a teacher. He taught for a time in Binghamton. After teaching, he accepted a clerkship at the law offices of Schoonmaker & Hardenburgh in Kingston and then enrolled at Albany Law School, from which he ...

  5. The Democrats eventually united around Alton Parker, the Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals, as their 1904 presidential nominee. [3] Parker had been the campaign manager for New York Governor David B. Hill in 1885 and acquired a reputation for fairness, competence, and courtesy as a judge. [3]

  6. Alton Brooks Parker (May 14, 1852 – May 10, 1926) was an American judge. He was the Democratic nominee in the 1904 United States presidential election, losing in a landslide to incumbent Republican Theodore Roosevelt. A native of upstate New York, Parker practiced law in Kingston, New York, before being appointed to the New York Supreme Court ...

  7. 1 de ene. de 2024 · This first full-length biography of Alton Brooks Parker provides an in-depth look into the life, career, and legacy of one of the most important New Yorkers of the Gilded Age. Parker had the courage to challenge Theodore Roosevelt for the presidency in 1904—at the height of Roosevelt's popularity—and was a transition point between the conservative and the new, progressive wing of the ...