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  1. Joseph Hodges Choate (January 24, 1832 – May 14, 1917) was an American lawyer and diplomat. He was chairman of the American delegation at the Second Hague Conference, and ambassador to the United Kingdom.

  2. 11 de jun. de 2018 · Joseph Hodges Choate was a popular lawyer in New York in the late 1800s. Choate distinguished himself by his exceptional career before the bar, his accomplishments as ambassador to the Court of St. James's (an ambassador to England), his dedication to public service, and his sharp wit and clever after-dinner speeches.

  3. This lawyer, who grew up in Salem, Massachusetts, battled Tammany Hall in New York before he became U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain. He settled the Alaska-Canada dispute and negotiated the Open Door Policy in China.

    • Susan Ritchie
  4. Joseph Hodges Choate Jr. (February 2, 1876 – January 19, 1968), was an American lawyer who chaired the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers, a group established in 1927 that promoted the repeal of prohibition.

  5. In 1897, Choate was a candidate for the Republican U.S. senatorial nomination for New York, and in 1894 he was president of the New York state constitutional convention. In 1899 he was appointed to U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom and served until 1905.

  6. Choate, Joseph Hodges, 1832-1917, Lawyers -- United States -- Biography Publisher New York : C. Scribner's Sons Collection Princeton; americana Contributor Princeton Theological Seminary Library Language English Volume v. 1

  7. JOSEPH HODGES CHOATE: TWENTY-FIRST PRESIDENT OF ASSOCIATION By William V. Rowe Member of New York and Massachusetts Bars MR. CHOATE was the twenty-first president of the American Bar Association. In his election, in 1898-9, the Association may be said to have reached its majority, and to have passed, from its ex