- Roger Sherman Greene
Roger Sherman Greene (1840–1930) was a
United States lawyer, judge, politician and military officer.He was a descendant of many of the distinguished families of the Atlantic states. On the maternal side he was the great-grandson of
Roger Sherman , one of the signers of theDeclaration of Independence , theArticles of Confederation , and theUnited States Constitution . His mother, Mary Evarts, was a daughter ofJeremiah Evarts and a sister ofWilliam M. Evarts ,US Secretary of State ,US Attorney General and a US Senator fromNew York . His father, David Greene, was for twenty years the corresponding secretary of theAmerican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions . In his eighth year the family moved toWestborough, Massachusetts , and two years later toWindsor, Vermont .He graduated from
Dartmouth College in 1859. During his college life, being largely dependent upon his own exertions for support, he taught school in vacations at Windsor in the winter of 1857-58, and atFalmouth, Massachusetts in the winter of 1858-59. Soon after his graduation he began the study of law in the office of Evarts, Southmayd & Choate, in New York City. In this office as student, and afterward as managing clerk, he gained preliminary legal training. In May 1862, inNew York City , he was admitted to practice, but he soon abandoned his professional career and to enter the Union army.In September 1862, he enlisted under commission as 2d Lieutenant of Company I, 3d
Missouri Infantry; in March following he was promoted to 1st Lieutenant of the same company, and still later, in 1863, was made captain of Company C, 51st U. S. Colored Infantry., serving until honorably discharged by acceptance of his resignation in November 1865. He also served during this period as judge advocate of the District of Vicksburg at the close of 1864 and beginning of 1865, and judge advocate of the Western Division ofLouisiana from June 1865, until retirement from service. He received a gun-shot wound through the right arm in the general assault on Vicksburg while in command of his company onMay 22 1863 . Just before his military service, Judge Greene was offered the position of Assistant United States District Attorney for the Southern District of New York, but declined the office.In January 1866, he began a legal practice in
Chicago , occupying the same office with Perkin Bass, then United States attorney, with whom he was associated in practice.He remained in Chicago until his appointment by President
Ulysses S. Grant to associate justice on the Supreme Court ofWashington Territory , 1870-79. He settled at Olympia, and in 1880 he was commissioned chief justice, at which time he moved to Seattle. In 1883 he was re-appointed chief justice and served until the close of his term in March 1887. In March 1887, he formed a professional copartnership with HonorableCornelius H. Hanford , who later became a United States District Judge for the District of Washington, and HonorableJohn H. McGraw , who became Governor of the State ofWashington , under the firm name of Greene, Hanford & McGraw; afterward, in August, the firm was enlarged by the addition of another member,Joseph F. McNaught , Esquire, under the firm name of Greene, McNaught, Hanford & McGraw.In July 1888, the partnership was dissolved by mutual consent, all the partners retiring from practice, the senior partner on account of temporary ill-health, Messrs. McNaught and McGraw to enter other pursuits and Judge Hanford to become chief justice of the Supreme Court of Washington Territory. In 1889 Judge Greene resumed the practice of law, and in 1890 formed a partnership with
L. Theodore Turner of Seattle, under the firm name of Greene & Turner. In 1889 he was trustee and secretary of theSeattle Investment Co. In 1890 he became trustee and secretary of theSeattle Trust Co , and trustee and vice president ofRainier Power and Railway Co. , 1890-1893.Greene was identified with the Republican Party until the year 1888, when he joined the Prohibition movement. He was a
Prohibition Party candidate for US Congress from Washington, 1888; and the Prohibition candidate for Governor of the State of Washington, 1892.Religiously, his parents being Congregationalists, his first church connection was with the church of that denomination in Windsor, where his membership remained until after the war. Then he united with the New England Congregational Church of Chicago. Afterward he was a constituent and prominent member of the Lincoln Park Church. On removal to Olympia he joined the Baptist church.
Judge Greene was married
August 17 1866 , atWhitewater, Wisconsin , to Grace, daughter of Jesse and Rhoda (Brockett) Wooster ofNaugatuck, Connecticut . They had four children: Agnes Margaret, born October 18, 1868; Roger Sherman, born September 29, 1870; Grace Evarts, born January 15, 1875, and Mary Rhoda, born July 27, 1876.Source
Jacob G. Ullery, compiler, "Men of Vermont: An Illustrated Biographical History of Vermonters and Sons of Vermont", (Transcript Publishing Company, Brattleboro, VT, 1894), Part III, p. 74.
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