Joseph H. Choate Jr.
Joseph Hodges Choate Jr. (February 2, 1876 – January 19, 1968) chaired the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers, a group established in 1927 that promoted the repeal of prohibition. Upon repeal in 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt named Choate the first head of the Federal Alcohol Control Administration (FACA).
Biography
Joseph Hodges Choate Jr. was a son of the U.S. lawyer and diplomat Joseph Hodges Choate and artist and activist Caroline Dutcher Sterling Choate. Joseph Hodges Choate Jr. married Cora Oliver, daughter of General Robert Shaw Oliver in 1903. They had four children. He died in 1968.[1] He graduated from Harvard University and Harvard Law School.[2]
Quotes
One of Choate's very famous quotes was "You cannot live without lawyers, and certainly you cannot die without them."
References
- "Joseph H. Choate, Lawyer, 91, Dead. Led Federal Unit to Guide Liquor Industry at Repeal". New York Times. January 20, 1968. Retrieved 2010-11-04.
Joseph H. Choate Jr., a distinguished lawyer who was chairman of the Federal Alcohol Control Administration from 1933 to 1935, died today in his home on ...
- "DACS". www.wesleyan.edu.