William S. Jackson

William Schuyler Jackson (died November 23, 1932 in Jamaica, Queens, New York City) was an American lawyer and politician.

Biography

Jackson was the son of D. G. Jackson, a lawyer from Tonawanda, NY. In 1892, he married a daughter of Buffalo shoe dealer T. B. Staley. They had two children.

He was First Assistant District Attorney of Erie County when he was elected New York State Attorney General on the Democratic and the Independence League tickets in November 1906. In February 1907, when he was just a month in office, his wife retained Edward E. Coatsworth (the former law partner of William F. Sheehan, Charles F. Tabor and John Cunneen) and announced she would sue for divorce. Two days later, they reconciled.

In 1920, he sent a letter to Governor Al Smith, protesting against the expulsion of five Socialist members (among them Louis Waldman and Sam Dewitt) from the New York State Assembly.

Sources

gollark: I still don't think they're that great for some of the intended uses.
gollark: I mean, the zim format works okay, but if I was doing it I would save time and just make it a layer over SQLite.
gollark: HTML nodes are *basically* just a```ruststruct Html { name: String, attributes: Map<String, String>, children: Vec<Html>}```so I think that could be pretty compact.
gollark: I don't think so, fair point. It could be done in a VFS, but æ.
gollark: I would not really be against a binary HTML encoding since it could be useful in other places, *especially* since it could be parsed way faster if you impose constraints browsers can't because backward compat.
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Legal offices
Preceded by
Julius Marshuetz Mayer
New York State Attorney General
1907–1908
Succeeded by
Edward R. O'Malley


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