William D. Mitchell

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Mitchell on a 1930 Time cover
Mitchell on a 1930 Time cover

William DeWitt Mitchell (September 9, 1874August 24, 1955) was appointed to the position of U.S. Solicitor General by Calvin Coolridge in June 5, 1925, which he held until he was appointed to the position of U.S. Attorney General for the entirety of Herbert Hoover's Presidency.

Born in Winona, Minnesota, he spent two years studying Electrical Engineering at Yale University before becoming interested in law. At that point he transferred to the University of Minnesota, where he received both his undergraduate and law degrees. After he was admitted to the Minnesota bar he began practicing law in St. Paul. He formed the law firm of How, Taylor & Mitchell, which became prominent in the Midwest. This prestige allowed Mitchell access to both the regional council of the U.S. Railroad Administration in 1919, and then he served as chairman of the Citizens Charter Committee of St. Paul in 1922.

Combined with Mitchell's service as an infantry officer during the Spanish-American War and World War I, this placed him in position to be appointed to the position of Solicitor General of the United States. Having served well in his position, President Hoover appointed him Attorney General of the United States on March 4, 1929, and he held that office until March 4, 1933. Mitchell then settled in New York City where he practiced law. He was named chairman of the Committee on Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and chief counsel of the joint congressional committee investigating the attack on Pearl Harbor. He died in 1955, in Syosset, New York.

All information on this page can be found on his page at the USDOJ website: OSG: William D. Mitchell, Solicitor General

Preceded by
James M. Beck
Solicitor General
19251929
Succeeded by
Charles Evans Hughes, Jr.
Preceded by
John G. Sargent
United States Attorney General
19291933
Succeeded by
Homer S. Cummings


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