Girish Mahajan (Editor)

John Randolph Tucker (judge)

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Preceded by
  
Cornelius D. Murane

Preceded by
  
J. Lawrence Campbell

Political party
  
Democratic

Party
  
Democratic Party

Succeeded by
  
William A. Holzheimer

Succeeded by
  
William T. Paxton

Spouse(s)
  
Mary Singleton Hampton

Appointed by
  
Woodrow Wilson

John Randolph Tucker (judge)

Full Name
  
John Randolph Tucker

Born
  
August 13, 1854 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (
1854-08-13
)

Died
  
18 December 1926, Bedford, Virginia, United States

Similar
  
Louis Brandeis, James Hay, John Weld Peck, David C Westenhaver, Martin Thomas Manton

John Randolph Tucker (August 13, 1854 – December 18, 1926) was an American judge and Democratic politician who served as a member of the Virginia Senate.

He was born in Philadelphia to Dr. David Hunter Tucker and the former Elizabeth Dallas. His father, son of Henry St. George Tucker, Sr., was then serving as Dean of the Medical College of Virginia.

He was sometimes referred to as "J. Randolph Tucker, Jr.," to distinguish him from his uncle, a U.S. congressman.

In 1913, Tucker was appointed by Woodrow Wilson to a four-year term on the federal bench in the Alaska territory. While there, Judge Tucker named the Wade Hampton Census Area in Alaska to commemorate his father-in-law, South Carolina politician Wade Hampton III. Years later, after new attention was brought to Hampton's status as a Confederate general and ardent supporter of the Ku Klux Klan, the area was re-designated as the Kusilvak Census Area in 2015.

References

John Randolph Tucker (judge) Wikipedia