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  1. Charles Evans Hughes

    Charles Evans Hughes

    Chief Justice of the United States from 1930 to 1941

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  1. › Children

    • Charles Evans Hughes Jr.Charles Evans Hughes Jr.
      134 years old
    • Elizabeth Hughes GossettElizabeth Hughes Gossett
      116 years old
  1. In 1888, Hughes married Antoinette Carter, the daughter of the senior partner of the law firm where he worked. Their first child, Charles Evans Hughes Jr., was born the following year, and Hughes purchased a house in Manhattan's Upper West Side neighborhood. [9]

  2. Nov 9, 2009 · A precocious child, Hughes learned to read at the age of three and a half. Before he was six, he was reading and reciting verses from the New Testament, doing mental arithmetic, and studying ...

    • Charles Evans Hughes
  3. Sep 18, 2023 · Hughes died of a brain tumor on January 21, 1950, and was survived by his wife Marjorie Bruce Stuart, and children: Charles Evans 3rd, Henry Stuart, Helen and Marjorie Bruce. He was laid to rest in New York. Updated September 18, 2023.

  4. The only child of a Baptist minister and a strong-willed, doting mother who hoped their son would become a man of the cloth, Charles Evans Hughes compiled a record of public service unparalleled for its diversity and achievement by any other member of the Supreme Court with the exception of william howard taft.

  5. He was a son of Antoinette Ellen Carter Hughes (1864–1945) and Charles Evans Hughes, the former governor of New York who served as Chief Justice of the United States and 1916 Republican presidential nominee.

  6. Charles Evans Hughes served as Secretary of State from March 5, 1921, to March 5, 1925, during the administration of President Warren Harding. He continued as Secretary after Harding’s death in office, but resigned at the beginning of President Calvin Coolidge ’s full term.

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  8. Charles Evan Hughes, American jurist and statesman who served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (1910–16), U.S. secretary of state (1921–25), and 11th chief justice of the United States (1930–41). Learn more about Hughes’s life and career.

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