Edward Baldwin Whitney
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edward Baldwin Whitney (August 16, 1857-January 5, 1911) was an American lawyer and judge.
He graduated from Yale College, 1878; Judge William H. Taft, United States circuit court was one of his classmates. After Yale he went on to the Columbia Law School and was admitted to the bar of New York, 1880; managing clerk, Bristow, Peet & Opdyke. In 1883, with General Henry L. Burnett, who was a member of that firm, he formed the firm of Burnett & Whitney. He was a justice of the New York State Supreme Court from 1909-1911.
Although he never held elected office, he was an active Democrat and organizer of the national association of Democratic clubs, secretary from its organization, 1888-90. Secretary, anti-Hill organization in New York up to the time of the February convention last year, when it was reorganized. At the May convention at Syracuse he was chosen as delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Chicago.
Whitney was a trustee, Reform Club; member, Century Club; Democratic Club; Skull & Bones; and of the Lawyers' club and of the bar association of New York. Appointed by President Grover Cleveland to be Assistant Attorney General of the United States.
He was the son of Professor William Dwight Whitney, the grandson of US Senator & Governor of Connecticut Roger Sherman Baldwin and the father of Professor Hassler Whitney. He married A. Josepha Newcomb, the daughter of famed astronomer and mathematician Simon Newcomb.
[edit] External links
- Edward Baldwin Whitney at The Descendants of John Whitney, pages 486 - 490
- Edward Baldwin Whitney at The Descendants of John Whitney, pages 491 - 495
- At the United States Government, 1893
- General Henry L. Burnett Biographical Cyclopaedia and Portrait Gallery Vol. 6, page 1354
- Sherman Genealogy Including Families of Essex, Suffolk and Norfolk, England By Thomas Townsend Sherman
- Hoar-Baldwin-Foster-Sherman family of Massachusetts at Political Graveyard]

