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Milton H. Myrick

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Photograph of Milton H. Myrick from History of the Bench and Bar of California (1901).

Milton Hills Myrick (May 28, 1826 - 1907) was an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of California from January 5, 1880 to January 3, 1887.

Born on a farm near Paris Hill, in Oneida County, New York, Myrick's father was Rev. Luther Myrick of New England, a descendent of Ensign William Myrick, who had settled in Eastham, Massachusetts, on Cape Cod, in 1646, and served six years under Miles Standish.[1] Myrick moved with his family as his father assumed various ministries. As a boy, Myrick learned to typset for a weekly paper published by his father in Oswego, and worked in a printing office while attended school at the Cazenovia Seminary in Cazenovia, New York.[1] In May 1843, the family moved to a farm in Jackson County, Michigan, where Myrick's father died that September.[1]

From 1845 to 1847, Myrick continued to work in printing, first in Jackson County, then returning to New York, to Albany (where he worked on the Argus), Syracuse, New York City, and finally in the government printing office in Washington, D.C.[1] While employed in Washington, Myrick "saw John Quincy Adams as he lay dying on a cot in the speaker's room".[1] In 1848, Myrick returned to Michigan and read law in the law office of Frink & Blair.[1] During this time, he became the deputy county clerk of Jackson County, and of the Michigan Supreme Court, when it sat in that county. In 1850, he was admitted to the bar, and the following summer he worked for governor William H. Seward, performing tasks related to a case being heard in Detroit.[1]

In 1854, Myrick traveled to California by the Nicaragua route, arriving in San Francisco in October with only five dollars in his possession. He worked as a printer for a year on the San Francisco Sun. In October 1855, he moved to Shasta, California and helped to establish the Shasta Republican. In May 1857, he moved to Red Bluff, California and resumed the practice of law in partnership with Warner Earll. In May 1866, he returned to San Francisco, this time as an attorney, and was appointed by Judge O.C. Pratt of the Twelfth Judicial District to act as a referee in a complicated partitions case.[1]

In 1871, he was elected to a four-year term on the country probate court as the nominee of the "Tax Payer's Convention", taking office on January 1, 1872. He was reelected as a Republican in 1875, his second term running from January 1, 1876 to December 31, 1879. In 1879, he was nominated as a Republican candidate for a seat as an Associate Justice on the California Supreme Court. He was elected, serving from January 1, 1880 to January 1, 1887.[1] Following his service, he served as president of the Saratoga Village Improvement Association,[2] and resumed the private practice of law,[1] and remained in practice until his death, in 1907.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Oscar Tully Shuck, History of the Bench and Bar of California (1901), p. 726-730.
  2. ^ Saratoga Chamber of Commerce, History of the Saratoga Chamber of Commerce.
  3. ^ James Terry White, The National cyclopaedia of American biography (1950), p. 379.