128:, was tried for libel after publishing a letter from a brick maker who said of the Clark & Van Blarcom brickyard that the men were overworked and starved, and housed in places no better than pigsties. Dixon presided over the much-publicized trial, earning a reputation for being anti-labor. McDonnell was convicted and sentenced to two months in jail. When he was released on 1 April 1880 he was met by a cheering crowd.
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candidate. Abbett, also from Jersey City, attacked Dixon for drafting the "thieves' charter" that deprived the Jersey City Irish of power in 1871. Abbett also criticized Dixon for handing down
Supreme Court rulings that were perceived as anti-labor. Abbett defeated Dixon by a margin of 103,856 to
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Dixon declined to take an active part in politics, and even when New Jersey
Republicans nominated him for governor in 1883, he refused to make political speeches, since he felt it would be beneath the dignity of a Supreme Court Justice. McDonnell used the
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on July 6, 1839. His father, also named
Jonathan Dixon, came to the United States in 1848 and was followed in 1850 by his family, settling in
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418:
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History of Bergen and
Passaic Counties, New Jersey: With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Pioneers and Prominent Men
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Dixon continued to serve as
Supreme Court Justice until his death. He died in 1906 at his daughter's home in
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until 1875, when he was appointed to be a
Supreme Court Justice by Governor
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to attack Dixon as anti-labor and anti-union, and threw his support behind
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in 1859 and was admitted to the New Jersey bar in 1862. He moved to
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Leon Abbett's New Jersey: The
Emergence of the Modern Governor
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38:(July 6, 1839 – May 21, 1906) was an American
175:History of Middlesex County, New Jersey, 1664-1920
104:. He was subsequently reappointed by Governors
8:
394:Justices of the Supreme Court of New Jersey
404:Politicians from New Brunswick, New Jersey
331:
409:Politicians from Jersey City, New Jersey
120:. In February 1880 the socialist leader
281:Hogarty, Richard A. (January 1, 2001).
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61:and was the Republican nominee for
287:. American Philosophical Society.
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140:, giving a useful boost to the
1:
315:. Everts & Peck. p.
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424:19th-century American judges
210:– via Newspapers.com.
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92:Dixon was associated with
414:Rutgers University alumni
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339:
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202:. May 22, 1906. p. 9
89:to practice law in 1865.
79:New Brunswick, New Jersey
335:Party political offices
309:Nelson, William (1882).
264:New Jersey State Library
122:Joseph Patrick McDonnell
94:New Jersey Supreme Court
59:New Jersey Supreme Court
366:Benjamin Franklin Howey
260:Biography of Leon Abbet
194:"Justice Dixon is Dead"
419:Lawyers from Liverpool
399:New Jersey Republicans
354:Governor of New Jersey
63:Governor of New Jersey
32:
150:Englewood, New Jersey
24:
81:. He graduated from
199:The New York Times
152:at the age of 66.
75:Liverpool, England
73:Dixon was born in
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372:
371:
363:Succeeded by
343:Frederic A. Potts
294:978-0-87169-243-6
55:Associate Justice
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340:Preceded by
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102:Joseph D. Bedle
98:Gilbert Collins
83:Rutgers College
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134:Labor Standard
126:Labor Standard
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36:Jonathan Dixon
16:American judge
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352:Nominee for
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320:. Retrieved
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298:. Retrieved
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248:Hogarty 2001
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236:Hogarty 2001
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204:. Retrieved
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53:. He was an
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389:1906 deaths
384:1839 births
224:Nelson 1882
138:Leon Abbett
87:Jersey City
30: 1900
378:Categories
350:Republican
322:August 31,
300:August 31,
156:References
142:Democratic
51:New Jersey
47:politician
161:Citations
69:Biography
65:in 1883.
145:97,047.
96:Justice
274:Sources
206:July 3,
178:(1921).
57:of the
291:
118:Murphy
116:, and
114:Griggs
106:Ludlow
40:jurist
25:Dixon
110:Green
49:from
359:1883
324:2013
302:2013
289:ISBN
208:2023
42:and
317:374
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262:,
216:^
196:.
183:^
112:,
108:,
27:c.
326:.
304:.
266:.
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