- John Marvin Jones
Judge John Marvin Jones (
February 26 ,1882 –March 4 ,1976 ) was a member of theUnited States House of Representatives fromTexas and Chief Judge of the federal Court of Claims.Marvin Jones was born to Horace King and Theodicia Jones on a
cotton farm inCooke County, Texas near the town ofValley View, Texas . By the age of 17, he was a teacher in aone-room school , and worked his way throughSouthwestern University , earning himself aPh.B. He earned anLL.B. from theUniversity of Texas at Austin in 1907.He moved to
Amarillo, Texas to practice law and after an energetic campaign was elected as a member of the Democratic Party to the65th United States Congress , handily defeating a 20 year incumbent,John H. Stephens . Jones servedTexas's 13th congressional district for 24 years. His vote for the declaration of war against Germany was his first vote as a freshman congressman. He thereupon enlisted as a private in theUnited States Army in 1918, but hostilities ceased before he was sent overseas.He became chairman of the House Committee on Agriculture in 1931, and as such promoted legislative efforts by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt to create a "New Deal " for American agriculture. He introduced, sponsored or supported theAgricultural Adjustment Act , theFarm Credit Administration Act, and several other laws in support of farmers.Jones was nominated by President Roosevelt to be an associate judge of the
United States Court of Claims on April 9, 1940. Jones was given a leave of absence from the court duringWorld War II to serve on various boards and committees at the request of the President. Following the war and Jones's return to the court, PresidentHarry S. Truman nominated him to be Chief Justice of the Court of Claims in 1947. The use of the title of Chief Justice was ended by Congress for all federal courts other than the Supreme Court, so Jones continued asChief Judge until his retirement in 1964. He was replaced in that role by his friend and fellow Texan, Judge Wilson Cowen. Jones continued to serve as a senior judge. He died and is buried in Amarillo.In 1980, President
Jimmy Carter signed a bill naming Amarillo's federal court building, J. Marvin Jones Federal Building. [Raynor, Jessica. [http://www.amarillo.com/stories/051900/his_jones.html "Judge Marvin Jones."] "Amarillo Globe-News." Accessed on August 9, 2006.]Notes
Bibliography and references
*
*cite book | last = May | first = Irvin M. | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Marvin Jones, the public life of an agrarian advocate | publisher = Texas A&M University Press | date = 1980 | location = College Station | url = | doi = | id = 978-1-58544-029-0
*cite book | last = Jones | first = Marvin | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Memoirs; 1917-1973, fifty-six years of continuing service in all three branches of the Federal Government. Edited and annotated by Joseph M. Ray. | publisher = Texas Western Press | date = 1973 | location = El PasoExternal links
*CongBio|J000236
* [http://www.geocities.com/valleyview1872/judge_jones.html Under the Shade Tree: John Marvin Jones biography] (Written by a resident of Jones' hometown, Valley View, Texas.)
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.