Curtis Shake
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Curtis Grover Shake (July 14, 1887 – September 11, 1978) was a noted Indiana jurist, politician, and 72nd Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court, serving from 1938-1946. He presided the IG Farben trial, one of the Subsequent Nuremberg Trials held at Nuremberg, Germany after World War II.
Born in Harrison Township, Knox County, Indiana, he studied at Vincennes University where he was a member of Sigma Pi Fraternity, graduating in 1906. He subsequently earned his L.L.B. from Indiana University in 1910. He served as a State Senator from 1928 to 1946, and in December 1938, he was appointed to the Supreme Court of Indiana, where he sat until 1946 and which he presided three times. He was also an Indiana State Senator from 1928 to 1946. In 1947, he went to Nuremberg in Germany to preside the IG Farben trial, one of the twelve trials for war crimes the U.S. authorities held in their occupation zone after the end of World War II.
He was elected to the Indiana Academy, an organization honoring people with a Hoosier background who have won national recognition for themselves or the state. The Sigma Pi Fraternity's Curtis G. Shake Scholarship is also named in his honor and is awarded to members of his fraternity who excel in legal studies.
[edit] Publications
- A History of Vincennes University (1928)
- The Old Cathedral and Its Environs (1934)
- A Naval History of Vincennes (1936).
[edit] References
- Browning, M. C.; Humphrey, R.; Kleinschmidt, B.: Biographical Sketches of Indiana Supreme Court Justices, Indiana Law Review 30(1), 1997.