Nathan Abbott
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Nathan Abbott (1854-January 4, 1941) was an American lawyer and law teacher of distinction, born at Norridgewock, Maine, the son of Abiel Abbott. He was educated at Yale College, graduating in 1877, and studied law in Boston University. After some years of practice in the city of Boston he was invited to become Tappan Professor of Law in the University of Michigan, and from that time on he dovoted himself exclusively to legal scholarship and teaching. After a year at the University of Michigan, Professor Abbott was appoined Professor of Law in Northwestern University and two years later, in 1895, he became Professor of Law and Dean of the Law School of Leland Stanford University. That position he held until 1907, after which time he was a member of the Law Faculty of Columbia University, New York City. He was a legal scholar of wide reputation and a recognized authority on the English and American Law of Real Property.
[edit] References
- Harlan Fiske Stone, "Nathan Abbott". Columbia Law Review, pp. 577-78, April 1941.
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.