Joseph I. Green
{{short description|American politician}}
Joseph I. Green (February 11, 1868 – May 31, 1939) was a Jewish-American lawyer, politician, and judge from New York.
Life
Green was born on February 11, 1868, in New York City, New York, of English parents.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OiufUDG-zboC|title=The Convention Manual of Procedure, Forms and Rules for the Regulation of Business in the Sixth New York State Constitutional Convention, 1894: Delegates Manual and Introduction|publisher=The Argus Company|year=1894|location=Albany, N.Y.|pages=lxxxiii|via=Google Books}} He was the son of Israel H. Green and Ray Levett.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xzHTAAAAMAAJ|title=Men of America: A Biographical Dictionary of Contemporaries|publisher=L. R. Hamersly & Company|year=1908|editor-last=Leonard|editor-first=John W.|location=New York, N.Y.|pages=1032–1033|language=en|via=Google Books}}
Green graduated from public school when he was twelve and had private tuition for four years. He then did a three-year course at Columbia Law School and Columbia College School of Political Science. He graduated in 1887 with an LL.B. from the Law School and LL.B. cum laude from the Political Science School. He was admitted to the bar when he was twenty-one and developed a large and lucrative law practice in New York City.{{Cite book|last=Murlin|first=Edgar L.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YpFFAQAAMAAJ|title=The New York Red Book|publisher=James B. Lyon|year=1896|location=Albany, N.Y.|pages=225|language=en|via=Google Books}}
By 1894, Green had law offices in the Stewart Building and was chairman of the Twenty-second Assembly District Committee and a member of the Tammany Hall General Committee and his district's Committee on Organization. He was a delegate to the 1894 New York State Constitutional Convention. In 1895, he was elected to the New York State Assembly as a Democrat, representing the New York County 28th District. He served in the Assembly in 1896 (when he introduced bills that would amend commands of the Penal Code with reference to suicide, relieve New York hospitals from a water tax, require certain precautions to be made against fire, regulate the right of removal of actions in New York courts, amend the Constitution with reference to passes, make Andrew Jackson's birthday a legal holiday, and make changes to medical treatment of the sick and injured), 1897 (having run the previous election as a Democrat and Populist candidate),{{Cite book|last=Murlin|first=Edgar L.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y80GAQAAIAAJ|title=The New York Red Book|publisher=James B. Lyon|year=1897|location=Albany, N.Y.|pages=217–218|language=en|via=Google Books}} 1898,{{Cite book|last=Murlin|first=Edgar L.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=biQ0AQAAMAAJ|title=The New York Red Book|publisher=James B. Lyon|year=1898|location=Albany, N.Y.|pages=216–217|language=en|via=Google Books}} 1899,{{Cite book|last=Murlin|first=Edgar L.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5yM0AQAAMAAJ|title=The New York Red Book|publisher=James B. Lyon|year=1899|location=Albany, N.Y.|pages=195|language=en|via=Google Books}} and 1900.{{Cite book|last=Murlin|first=Edgar L.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1SQ0AQAAMAAJ|title=The New York Red Book|publisher=James B. Lyon|year=1900|location=Albany, N.Y.|pages=130|language=en|via=Google Books}} He was elected Justice of the City Court, serving on the bench until the end of 1915.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xzHTAAAAMAAJ|title=Who's Who in New York (City and State), 1924|publisher=Who's Who Publications, Inc.|year=1924|editor-last=Holmes|editor-first=Frank R.|edition=Eighth|location=New York, N.Y.|pages=534|language=en|via=Google Books}}
Green was Jewish. He was president of the Metropolitan Hospital and Dispensary, the Hebrew Orphan Asylum, the Hebrew Infant Asylum, the Montefiore Home, Mount Sinai Hospital, the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society of New York, and the Cherokee Club. He was a member of the New York County Lawyers' Association, the New York State Bar Association, the Freemasons, the Knights of Pythias, and the City Club of New York. In 1896, he married Rose Hellenberg. Their children were Eleanor Constance, Dorothy Ruth, and Robert Alan.{{Cite book|last=Leonard|first=John William|url=https://archive.org/details/whoswhoinjurispr0000unse/page/587/mode/1up?view=theater|title=Who's Who in Jurisprudence|publisher=John W. Leonard Corporation|year=1925|location=Brooklyn, N.Y.|pages=587|language=en|via=Internet Archive}}
Green died at home from a heart ailment after an illness of several months on May 31, 1939. He was buried in Acacia Cemetery.{{Cite news|date=1 June 1939|title=Joseph I. Green, 71, Official Referee|volume=LXXXVIII|page=25|work=The New York Times|issue=29713|location=New York, N.Y.|url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1939/06/01/93922264.pdf}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/green5.html#787.01.31 The Political Graveyard]
{{s-start}}{{s-par|us-ny-hs}}
{{succession box
| title = New York State Assembly
New York County, 28th District
| years = 1896–1900
| before = George W. Hamilton
| after = John T. Dooling
}}
{{s-end}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Green, Joseph I.}}
Category:American people of English-Jewish descent
Category:Columbia College (New York) alumni
Category:Columbia Law School alumni
Category:19th-century American lawyers
Category:20th-century American lawyers
Category:Lawyers from New York City
Category:Politicians from Manhattan
Category:Democratic Party members of the New York State Assembly
Category:Jewish state legislators in New York (state)
Category:20th-century New York state court judges
Category:New York state court judges
Category:19th-century members of the New York State Legislature