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  1. Charles Evans Hughes served as Secretary of State from March 5, 1921, to March 5, 1925, during the administration of President Warren Harding. He continued as Secretary after Harding’s death in office, but resigned at the beginning of President Calvin Coolidge ’s full term. Charles Evans Hughes, 44th Secretary of State.

  2. 18 de sept. de 2023 · Charles Evans Hughes, Jr. was born on November 30, 1889 in New York, New York. Charles was the only son of former Secretary of State, Chief Justice of the United States, and 1916 Republican Presidential nominee Charles Evans Hughes, and mother, Antoinette.

  3. Charles Evans Hughes III (1915–1985), an architect. H. Stuart Hughes (1916–1999), a noted historian and activist; Helen Hughes, who was named after Hughes's sister Helen Hughes, who died at age 28 in 1920. Marjory Bruce Hughes (1929–2014), who married William Lee Johnson in 1952, the former general counsel of Otis Elevator Company.

  4. CHARLES EVANS HUGHES 293 was paid to the difference to an individual between the price of an evening at the theater and the price of a job in times when jobs were scarce. There are strange conflicts, doubtless, in the life of every man. Certainly they are marked in the life of Justice Suther land. Mr. Paschal appears in the light of a friendly but

  5. Charles Evans Hughes b. April 11, 1862, Glen Falls, NY d. August 27, 1948, Osterville, MA Associate Justice of the Supreme Court (1910-1916) Eleventh Chief Justice of the Supreme Court

  6. Charles Evans Hughes served as Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1930 to 1941. His distinguished career in public service also included serving as Governor of New York, Secretary of State, and an Associate Supreme Court Justice. Early Life Hughes was born in New York in 1862. He graduated from Brown University and … Continue reading "Charles Evans Hughes"

  7. The Hughes Court, 1930-1941. Nicknamed the “roving Justices,” new Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes and Associate Justice Owen J. Roberts sometimes joined the “four horsemen”–Justices George Sutherland, Pierce Butler, James C. McReynolds, and Willis Van Devanter–sometimes joined three Judges more willing to accept laws however ...