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Edward C. Turner

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American judge
Edward Crawford Turner
26th Ohio Attorney General
In office
1915–1917
GovernorFrank B. Willis
Preceded byTimothy S. Hogan
Succeeded byJoseph McGhee
30th Ohio Attorney General
In office
1927–1929
GovernorA. Victor Donahey
Preceded byCharles C. Crabbe
Succeeded byGilbert Bettman
Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio
In office
1940–1950
Appointed byJohn W. Bricker
Preceded byGeorge S. Myers
Succeeded byHoward E. Faught
Personal details
Born(1872-03-26)March 26, 1872
Columbus, Ohio
DiedSeptember 13, 1950(1950-09-13) (aged 78)
Columbus, Ohio
Resting placeGreen Lawn Cemetery
Columbus, Ohio
Political partyRepublican
SpouseNan A. Jahn
Alma materMoritz College of Law

Edward Crawford Turner (March 26, 1872 – September 13, 1950) was a Republican lawyer in the U.S. state of Ohio who served two non consecutive terms of two years as Ohio Attorney General, and was later a justice of the Ohio Supreme Court 1940 until his death.

Biography

Edward C. Turner was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1872 to Robert M. and Jane Crawford Turner. He graduated from Ohio State University College of Law in 1901, was admitted to the bar that year and began a practice in Columbus. He received a masters of law degree in 1903 from Ohio State.

Turner was elected Franklin County Prosecuting Attorney in 1910. Several members of the Ohio General Assembly were accused of taking bribes in 1911. Turner and Ohio Attorney General Timothy Hogan investigated. Five legislators were indicted, and four went to prison. In 1912, he was re-elected, and in that term, he prosecuted several officeholders who collected contributions from civil service employees, a violation of the law.

Turner was elected Ohio Attorney General in 1914, but lost re-election in 1916. He returned to private practice, and was elected Attorney General again in 1926. He ran in a three way Republican Party primary for Ohio Governor in 1928, but lost to eventual Governor Myers Y. Cooper.

May, 1939, Governor John W. Bricker appointed Turner to the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas to fill an unexpired term of a deceased judge, but he lost the Republican primary in 1940. Bricker appointed Turner to fill the unexpired term of George S. Myers October 1, 1940. He won election November 4, 1940, to the two remaining years of the term, and re-election in 1942 and 1948 to six year terms.

Turner served until his death September 13, 1950, after suffering a stroke. He was buried in Greenlawn Cemetery, Columbus, Ohio.

Turner was married to Nan A. Jahn December 11, 1902, and they had one son. Turner was a Freemason.

References

  1. ^ The Supreme Court of Ohio and The Ohio Judicial System - Edward C. Turner
  2. 10,000 Famous Freemasons

External links

Legal offices
Preceded byTimothy S. Hogan Ohio Attorney General
1915 – 1917
Succeeded byJoseph McGhee
Preceded byCharles C. Crabbe Ohio Attorney General
1927 – 1929
Succeeded byGilbert Bettman
Ohio attorneys general
  1. Stanbery
  2. McCormick
  3. Pugh
  4. McCook
  5. Kimball
  6. Wolcott
  7. Murray
  8. Critchfield
  9. Richardson
  10. Olds
  11. West
  12. Pond
  13. Little
  14. Pillars
  15. Nash
  16. Hollingsworth
  17. Lawrence
  18. Kohler
  19. Watson
  20. Richards
  21. Monnette
  22. Sheets
  23. Ellis
  24. Denman
  25. Hogan
  26. Turner
  27. McGhee
  28. Price
  29. Crabbe
  30. Turner
  31. Bettman
  32. Bricker
  33. Duffy
  34. Herbert
  35. Jenkins
  36. Duffy
  37. O'Neill
  38. Saxbe
  39. McElroy
  40. Saxbe
  41. Brown, P.
  42. Brown, W.
  43. Celebrezze
  44. Fisher
  45. Montgomery
  46. Petro
  47. Dann
  48. Rogers
  49. Cordray
  50. DeWine
  51. Yost
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