Draft:Peter Wood Crain
![]() | This draft is part of Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/United States judges and justices.
|
Peter W. Crain and Peter Crain should link here
Peter Wood Crain (1806 – April 6, 1892) was a lawyer in Maryland who served as a state legislator and justice of the Maryland Court of Appeals in 1867.[1]
Crain died at the Howard House in Baltimore on
Wednesday morning last. Death resulted from a general failure of his vital powers, due to his great age. Judge Crain was 86 years old, having been born in Charles County. He received his early education in the public schools of Charles County and his more advanced studies were pursued at Charlotte Hall. He read law with the late John T. Stoddard and graduated from a law school in Winchester, Virginia in 1827. The following year, he commenced the practice of his profession in Port Tobacco, and soon gained an enviable reputation as a lawyer. In 1841, he was elected to the legislature and was returned several times. He was appointed by the Governor in 1840 Chief Justice on the bench in the Southern Maryland judicial circuit, and served until 1851, when a new constitution made the judiciary elective, when he was elected for ten years to serve as judge of the judicial circuit, comprising Charles, St. Mary's and Prince George's counties. At the expiration of his term, he removed to Baltimore and commenced the practice of his profession in the city. He was in 1867, appointed to a seat on the bench of the Court of Appeals to a vacancy caused by the death of Judge Cochrane, and at the expiration of that term he again resumed practice, retiring in 1878. Judge Crain's wife was Miss Elizabeth Fowler, whose death occurred six years ago.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ "Maryland Court of Appeals Judges, 1778–". Archives of Maryland. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
- ^ "Ex-Judge Crain Dead", Saint Mary's Beacon (April 7, 1892), p. 2.
Category:1806 births
Category:1892 deaths
Category:Judges of the Supreme Court of Maryland
- This open draft remains in progress as of January 15, 2025.