Thomas G. Andrews (judge)

Thomas G. Andrews (1892–1942), a native of Orangeburg, South Carolina, also known as Thomas Galpin Andrews, was born to John D. Andrews and Belle (nee Darby) Andrews on August 29, 1882. In 1904, he married Adelphia Wohlgematt, who died in 1928.[1]

Thomas G. Andrews
Born
Thomas Galpin Andrews

August 29, 1882
Orangeburg, South Carolina
DiedSeptember 10, 1942(1942-09-10) (aged 60)
Oklahoma City
OccupationAttorney, Justice of the Oklahoma State Supreme Court
Years active1911-1942

Andrews became a lawyer and moved to Oklahoma in 1911.[lower-alpha 1] He served as city attorney in Stroud, Oklahoma, where he resided from 1911 to 1918.[lower-alpha 2] In 1919 he moved to Chandler, where he was city attorney and also Lincoln County, Oklahoma attorney from 1922 to 1929. He served as a Justice of the Oklahoma state supreme court (1925-1935). Harlow's 1930 book lists him under Lincoln County at that time.[3]

He married Reba Myers in 1930.[1]

Thomas died at his home in Oklahoma City on September 10, 1942.[4]

Andrews belonged to the Disciples of Christ church. He also was a member of the American Bar Association; Phi Delta Phi; Freemasons; Knights Templar; Shriners; Odd Fellows and Lions.[1]

Notes

  1. No source has indicated that Andrews had any formal law school training. Presumably, he qualified for the bar by reading law, a rather common practice, especially in the United States at that time.
  2. Thomas Galpin Andrews was still listed as a member of a legal society (Phi Delta Phi) in Lincoln, Nebraska for 1912.[2]
gollark: ONE SAMPLE is not statistically significant, bee.
gollark: Or, well, it was, but then I moved the wordlist into the config file to work faster.
gollark: It's only biased in clear, well-documented ways.
gollark: > not using ++choose
gollark: The committee disagrees.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.