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・ Joseph William Allen
・ Joseph William Burton
・ Joseph William Chitty
・ Joseph William Comeau
・ Joseph William Drexel
・ Joseph William Dunning
・ Joseph William Guyton
・ Joseph William Hadley
・ Joseph William Hendren
・ Joseph William Lawson
・ Joseph William Martin, Jr.
・ Joseph William McKay
・ Joseph William Mellor
・ Joseph William Moss
・ Joseph William Tobin
Joseph William Woodrough
・ Joseph Williams
・ Joseph Williams (Barbadian cricketer)
・ Joseph Williams (bishop)
・ Joseph Williams (composer)
・ Joseph Williams (Connecticut politician)
・ Joseph Williams (English cricketer)
・ Joseph Williams (justice)
・ Joseph Williams (musician)
・ Joseph Williams (Nevisian cricketer)
・ Joseph Williams Lovibond
・ Joseph Williams Vance, Jr.
・ Joseph Williamson
・ Joseph Williamson (Maine politician)
・ Joseph Williamson (philanthropist)


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Joseph William Woodrough : ウィキペディア英語版
Joseph William Woodrough
Joseph William Woodrough (August 29, 1873 – October 2, 1977) was a United States federal judge, and was one of the longest-lived and longest-serving judges in the history of the United States judiciary.
Although he served as a federal judge for a record 61 years (45 active, 16 senior),〔(Milestones of Judicial Service ) Federal Judicial Center. Retrieved 2 December 2014.〕 others have performed judicial work at greater ages or for longer periods.
Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, Woodrough attended Heidelberg University, and read law to enter the Bar in 1893. He was a judge of the county court of Ward County, Texas from 1894 to 1896, serving as county attorney for Ward County in 1897. He was in private practice in Omaha, Nebraska from 1898 to 1916.
On March 13, 1916, Woodrough was nominated by President Woodrow Wilson to a seat on the United States District Court for the District of Nebraska vacated by William H. Munger. Woodrough was confirmed by the United States Senate on March 31, 1916, and received his commission on April 3, 1916. Exactly seventeen years later, on April 3, 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt nominated Woodrough for elevation to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, vacated by Arba Seymour Van Valkenburg. Woodrough was again confirmed by the United States Senate on April 12, 1933, receiving his commission the same day. He assumed senior status on January 3, 1961, performing no judicial functions after taking part in a courthouse dedication later that year, but remaining a salaried Senior Circuit Judge until his death in 1977. He was the grandson of Joseph Woodrough, a sawmaker in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Agnes Moreman.
==See also==

* Wesley E. Brown

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