Stephen B. Pound (1833 - 1911) was a pioneer lawyer, senator, and judge in Nebraska. 1833 was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ... 1911 was a common year starting on Sunday (click on link for calendar). ... A lawyer is a person licensed by the state to advise clients in legal matters and represent them in courts of law (and in other forms of dispute resolution). ... A senate is a deliberative body, often the upper house or chamber of a legislature. ... A judge or justice is an appointed or elected official who presides over a court. ... State nickname: Cornhusker State Other U.S. States Capital Lincoln Largest city Omaha Governor Dave Heineman (R) Official languages English Area 200,520 km² (16th) - Land 199,099 km² - Water 1,247 km² (0. ...
Born and educated in New York state, Pound moved to Nebraska in 1869. He he was elected a judge and served in the state senate. 1869 is a common year starting on Friday (link will take you to calendar). ...
Pound was the father of three children, Roscoe, Louise, and Olivia. Roscoe Pound (1870 - 1964) born in Lincoln, Nebraska, Botanist, lawyer law professor, theorist, dean of the University of Nebraska College of Law, dean of Harvard University Law School and was a distinguished legal scholar and educator. ... Louise Pound (1872-1958) was a distinguished American folklorist and educator. ...
References
"Pound, Stephen Bosworth." The National Cyclopaedia of American Biogrpahy. 29:310-311. 1941.
Laura Biddlecome Pound was born in Phelps, New York, May 15, 1841.
She married JudgeStephenPound January 21, 1869, and came to live in Lincoln that month.
Two early letters from her correspondence contain detailed accounts of life in Lincoln before 1870: her future husband described it for her before her arrival, and a letter that LP herself wrote to "Esther" (last name unknown) in 1869 provides her own perspective on the early days in Lincoln.
Pound was born in Lincoln, Nebraska to StephenBosworthPound and Laura Pound.
Pound was born in Lincoln, Nebraska, USA to StephenBosworthPound and Laura Pound.
Pound unifies these three meanings in his definition, which incorporates law's basic function of social control: Law is a regime which is a highly specialized form of social control, carried on in accordance with a body of authoritative precepts, applied in the context of a judicial and an administrative process (p.