Arthur E. Sutherland Jr.

Arthur E. Sutherland Jr.
Born (1902-02-09)February 9, 1902
Rochester, New York
Died March 10, 1973(1973-03-10)
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Nationality American
Fields Lawyer, educator and historian
Institutions Harvard University Cornell University U.S. Army
Alma mater Wesleyan University,
Harvard Law School

Arthur Eugene Sutherland Jr. (Feb 9, 1920 – Mar 10, 1973) was an American lawyer, law professor, and author.

Biography

Arthur E. Sutherland Jr. was the youngest son of Arthur E. Sutherland a Justice of the New York State Supreme Court.[1] He was born and raised in Rochester New York. He attended college at Wesleyan University class of 1922, and graduated from the noted Harvard Law School Class of 1925 with a J. D.. He clerked for US Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. 1927–1928.[2][3]

After law school Sutherland returned to practice law for 14 years in Rochester, N.Y. where his father, Arthur E. Sutherland Sr., and older brother William Sutherland were both in the legal profession.[4]

Sutherland married Margaret Susanne Adams[5] and had four children: David, Peter, Eleanor and Prudy.[6] Mrs. Sutherland passed away New Year's Eve 1957/1958, one of the 70,000 Americans who died of the Asian flu during the 1957 pandemic. His second wife was Mary Elizabeth Genung Kirk.[6]

Arthur E. Sutherland died of cancer in 1973 in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Career

Military service

As a young man, in 1919 Sutherland was sent with Captain Emory H. Niles to survey areas of the recently toppled Ottoman Empire and report back, the Niles and Sutherland Report for the US Congress.[7]

During the Second World War, Sutherland served as Aide-de-Camps to General Mark W. Clark with distinction in the U.S. Army.[8] He left the Army in 1945 as a Colonel, with a number of high honors, including the Bronze Star and the Order of the British Empire.[2]

Awards and decorations

See Historical Bio[2]

Order of Ouissam Alaouite, Grand Cross - First Class (Morocco)
Legion of Merit, with cluster (America)
Order of the British Empire (England)
Croix de guerre 1939-1945 (France)
Czechoslovakian War Cross, War Cross (Czechoslovakia)

Law professor

Cornell University invited Arthur E. Sutherland Jr. to teach law after WWII in 1945.

Soon after, in 1950 Harvard Law School invited him to teach.[9] Arthur E. Sutherland Jr. was the Bussey Professor of Law Emeritus, author of a number of books on the law, and a frequently cited legal scholar on topics of both constitutional and commercial law. He was a member of the Harvard Faculty of Law for twenty years between 1950-1970. Sutherland helped draft the Uniform Commercial Code, a body of laws establishing common trade practices among the United States. He was chair of a special committee working to revise Massachusetts "blue laws" in 1962.[10] The simpler and more coherent set of laws was later adopted by the Massachusetts Legislature.[4] Sutherland was on the opposing legal team in the Gallagher v. Crown Kosher Super Market "Blue Laws" case brought before the US Supreme Court.[11]

Sutherland was an associate of Harvard's Adams House and was acting Master of Lowell House for a year from 1965 to 1966.[4]

Loeb University Professor, Paul A. Freund said of Sutherland that he "was an unusual combination of the scholarly and the homespun," with great "liveliness of mind and spirit." "His teaching was enlivened by anecdotes from the real world of law practice. He was one of the most popular Law School Faculty members within the larger University," Freund continued.[4]

Selected works

References

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