George Miles (Michigan jurist)
George Miles (April 5, 1789 – August 25, 1850) was an American jurist and lawyer.
Born in Amsterdam, New York, Miles was admitted to the New York bar in 1822. Miles served as New York District Attorney for Allegany County, New York. In 1837, Miles moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan and continued to practice law. He was a Democrat. Miles served on the Michigan Supreme Court from 1846 until his death in 1850. Miles died in Ann Arbor, Michigan.[1][2]
Notes
- Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society-George Miles
- 'History of the University of Michigan,' Burke A, Hinsdale, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan: 1906, Biographical Sketch of George Miles, pg. 170
gollark: <:boron:674876365367017492>eans
gollark: Histograms are just... why. Did they think "we must invent the most confusing and irritating possible way to represent data" or something?
gollark: I quite like maths. Except circle theorems and histograms.
gollark: They get around the fact that common calculators can do a not insignificant amount of the maths-exam stuff automatically by having a non-calculator paper for further maths, requiring working, and having more complex multi-step questions.
gollark: Maths, physics, chemistry, biology (very occasionally, it's not that mathy).
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