Albert Schaller

Albert Schaller (May 20, 1857 March 31, 1934) was an American jurist, politician, and businessman.

Albert Schaller

Born in Long Grove, Illinois, The Schaller family moved to Hastings Minnesota on July 4 of that year. Schaller attended secondary school in France. Schaller received his bachelor's degree from St. Vincent's College in Cape Girardeau, Missouri and his law degree from Washington University School of Law in 1879. Schaller practiced law in Hastings, Minnesota and was the Hastings City Attorney and the city attorney for South St. Paul, Minnesota. He married Katherine Elizabeth (Kate) Meloy of Hastings and they had five children; four lived to adulthood – Rosemarie, Karl, Marion, and Josephine. He was also county attorney for Dakota County, Minnesota. Schaller served in the Minnesota State Senate from 1895 to 1915 and was a Democrat. In March 1915, Schaller was appointed to the Minnesota Supreme Court and served until January 1917. Schaller resumed his law practice in Saint Paul, Minnesota and Hastings, Minnesota. Schaller died in Hastings, Minnesota and is buried in the family plot in Guardian Angels Cemetery in Hastings.[1][2][3]

Notes



gollark: Most people are behind NAT. This would prevent you from opening connections without a central server. Though there is WebRTC now, it's accursedly complex.
gollark: No.
gollark: I'm not sure. Probably don't.
gollark: No. You need something like GMP for bignums, but C has no operator overloading due to C bad.
gollark: Technically yes, practically not really I think; each connection has a bunch of state associated with it; the actual status of the TCP stream, and the random bytes the websocket data is XORed with (for entirely accursed reasons).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.