John Oliver Halstead Pitney
John Oliver Halstead Pitney (April 14, 1860 – October 6, 1928) was an American lawyer from New Jersey.[1] Early life and educationBorn in Morristown, New Jersey to Henry Cooper and Sarah Louise (Halsted) Pitney,[2] Pitney was "a member of one of New Jersey's oldest families",[3] described by Kim Isaac Eisler as a New Jersey blue-blood.[1] His great-grandfather Henry Cooper Pitney served in the American Revolutionary War.[4] Pitney's father and his older brother Mahlon Pitney were also lawyers;[4] Mahlon eventually served on the United States Supreme Court.[1][5] Pitney attended the Morris Academy, and received a B.A. from Princeton University in 1881 followed by an M.A. from the same institution in 1884.[6] He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa.[7] He read law under his father and gained admission to the bar in New Jersey at the June term of 1884 as an attorney, and three years later as a counselor.[2] CareerEstablishing himself in Newark, he partnered with Frederick H. Heese for the first ten years of his practice.[2] In 1902, he and John R. Hardin founded the law firm of Pitney & Hardin, later Pitney Hardin and Ward, in Newark;[8] his brother Mahlon also worked at the firm for a time, and has sometimes been incorrectly credited as a founder.[1] According to Eisler, the firm's clients included "some of the most notoriously antilabor corporations in the state", and because of its strike-breaking work it was known in the labor movement as "Pluck'em, Hook'em and Sink'em".[1] Pitney was elected to the Board of the United Electric Company of New Jersey in March 1901[9] and also served at various times as a director of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company and the American Insurance Company and a Trustee of Princeton University.[2] He was described as "an earnest Republican" who refused official positions on grounds of lack of time;[2] beginning in August 1917, he served as Chairman of the District Board for the Second Division of New Jersey under the War Department's administration of the Selective Service Law.[2] Pitney published a book about the history of his family in 1925.[5] The University of Chicago holds a letter to Pitney from William Howard Taft, accepting an invitation to attend a celebration of the birth of George Washington.[10] Personal life and deathOn January 16, 1890, Pitney married Roberta A. Ballantine of Newark. They had two children, John B., born in 1892, and Robert H., born in 1907.[2] Pitney died of a heart attack at his home in Newark at the age of 68,[3] following a period of poor health.[6] References
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