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Oliver Wendel Holmes 1841- 1935 Supreme Court Justice
Holmes reached the rank of brevet colonel. In 1864, Holmes returned to Boston to study at Harvard Law School. After graduating, he practiced law in his hometown. Holmes went on to become the co-editor of the American Law Review. In 1880, he was asked to deliver the prestigious Lowell Lectures. He transformed the lectures into the book, The Common Law, which became a classic text on jurisprudence. Holmes became a law professor at Harvard and was subsequently appointed to the Massachusetts Supreme Court in 1882, becoming the chief justice in 1899. Theodore Roosevelt nominated Holmes to the Supreme Court in 1902, where he served until 1932 when he retired at age 91. Holmes is known for authoring some of the Court's most notable decisions.
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