Melville W. Fuller (Noun)
Meaning
United States jurist and chief justice of the United States Supreme Court (1833-1910).
Classification
Nouns denoting people.
Examples
- Melville W. Fuller was appointed the eighth chief justice of the United States, serving from 1888 to 1910.
- The notable American lawyer and judge, Melville W. Fuller, studied at Bowdoin College in Maine and then moved on to study law in Augusta, Maine.
- From 1884 until 1910, Melville W. Fuller resided in this prominent Romanesque-style row house that later was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.
- Under his guidance as the Chief Justice of the United States, Melville W. Fuller witnessed an upswing in social changes taking place throughout America during his long-serving period of office.
- Prior to Melville W. Fuller assuming his long term at the head of the Supreme Court in the U.S, his accomplishments stood the ground from different key decisions affecting railroad commerce policies among them major company rates reductions or decisions reached out, providing consumers long standing company controlled set protection provisions changes along such corporate wide growth activities implemented further such said programs well respected wide acclaim gained nation across federal systems courts actions ever involved up right still used that Melville_W. _Fuller at these still his working decision involved until just close said by great service tenure work even retired Supreme then honored serving right serving career head eight _the whole a more accomplished