Iredell Meares

North Carolina lawyer and politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Iredell Meares

Iredell Meares (December 15, 1856 – September 15, 1931) was an American lawyer, public speaker, and politician in North Carolina. His obituary describes him as one of lower Cape Fear's most colorful characters.[1]

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Early life

He was born in Raleigh, North Carolina into a prominent family. His family's finances were wrecked by the Civil War and father died in 1871.[2]

A Democrat, he became an independent, then a Republican, and ran for governor as a Progressive.[2]

He reportedly sent his co-counsel a poem in lieu of a fee.[3] He served as deputy of customs in Wilmington.[4] He testified on the proposed establishment of a Department of Education in Washington D.C. He was a lawyer for the Sentinels of the Republic.[5]

He was a Progressive Party candidate in the 1912 North Carolina gubernatorial election.[6] Later in his career he worked in Washington D.C.[1]

He owned two Albert Rosenthal etchings, one of James Iredell.[7]

He was married to Josephine Meares. They had a daughter. He died September 15, 1931 in Wilmington, North Carolina.[1]

Writings

  • "An Address on the Administration of the Law; Delivered at the Laying of the Corner-stone of the New Courthouse for New Hanover County, at Wilmington, N.C., April 21st, 1892"[8]
  • "Mix Brains and Ballots; Day for Intellectual Voting" (1908)[9]
  • "Bank Deposit Guaranty; An Opposition View" (1908)[10]
  • "Mr. Taft's Judicial Decisions as They Relate to the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Labor Strikes" (1908)[11]
  • "Is the South to be Humiliated?; An Appeal to Southern Manhood" (1908)[12]
  • "Presidents who Have Visited Wilmington, N.C.; Washington, Monroe, Polk, Fillmore, Taft : Souvenir, November 9, 1909"[13]
  • "God Not in the Covenant; The League of Nations Doomed on the Day the Conference Met" (1920)[14]
  • The Trading with the Enemy Act; As Enacted and Amended, with Annotations : Addendum and Appendix Comprising Data Relating to the Act Star Publishing 1924[15][16][17]

See also

References

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