ELWYN B. ROBINSON DEPARTMENT OF SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
CHESTER FRITZ LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA
GRAND FORKS, NORTH DAKOTA 58202

JUDGE J. E. ROBINSON PAPERS

COLLECTION: OGL #587

DATES: 1916-1921

SIZE: .25 linear feet

INTRODUCTION

ACQUISITION: The Judge J. E. Robinson Papers were deposited in the Orin G. Libby Manuscript Collection (Acc. #80-672).

ACCESS: Open for inspection under the rules and regulations of the Department of Special Collections.

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH

James Eugene Robinson was born in Michigan on May 11, 1843. His early education was obtained in Canada, and he taught school there for a short period of time. He then enlisted in the Union Army and served during the Civil War.

After his discharge, Robinson began his formal education and he graduated from Michigan State University School of Law on March 5, 1868 with the degree of L.L.B. He was admitted to the Wisconsin bar and began his practice in Trempeleau County. He also served as District Attorney for the county for one term.

Robinson moved to Fargo, Dakota Territory, in 1882. He practiced in Fargo until 1916, when he was elected Associate Judge of the North Dakota Supreme Court. He served a full six year term until 1922. During this time, he wrote a "Saturday Evening Letter" column for the Bismarck Tribune pertaining to the work of the Supreme Court. Robinson was defeated for re-nomination in the June 1922 primary.

In 1923 Robinson authored a book entitled Wrongs and Remedies. After leaving the Supreme Court, he remained in Bismarck for a time, but was forced to retire from the active practice of law for health reasons. He entered a National Soldiers Home in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1931 and lived there until his death on March 22, 1933.

Sources:
North Dakota Blue Book, 1919.
Historical Sketch of the North Dakota Supreme Court
, David L. Peterson, 1969.

SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE

The Judge J. E. Robinson Papers date from 1916-1921, and consist of microfilm printouts of his "Saturday Evening Letter" column from the Bismarck Tribune. The letters contain unusual opinions about politics and justice in North Dakota. A number in the left-hand corner of each printout corresponds to a number on the inventory sheet in Folder 1.

BOX AND FOLDER INVENTORY

Box 1
Folder

  1. Inventory
  2. December 1916
  3. January - March 1917
  4. April - June 1917
  5. July - September 1917
  6. October - December 1917
  7. January - March 1918
  8. April - June 1918
  9. July - September 1918
  10. October - December 1918
  11. January - March 1919
  12. April - June 1919
  13. July - December 1919
  14. January - March 1920
  15. April - June 1920
  16. July - November 1920
  17. January 3, 1921

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