Statewide County HI Archives Biographies.....Judd, Albert F. December 20, 1874 - ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/hi/hifiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: J. Orr jessicanorr@gmail.com September 14, 2011, 2:00 pm Source: The Story of Hawaii and Its Builders, published by the Honolulu Star Bulletin, Territory of Hawaii, 1925 Author: Edited by George F. Nellist ALBERT F. JUDD, Attorney and Trustee. Grandson of Dr. G. P. Judd, advisor to the early kings of Hawaii, and son of Albert Francis Judd, former Chief Justice of Hawaii, Albert F. Judd has also been prominent in governmental affairs. He has been a trustee of Oahu College since 1901, is a trustee under the will of the late Mrs. Bernice Pauahi Bishop, administering the endowment of the Kamehameha Schools, and a trustee of the Bernice P. Bishop Museum. He is also a trustee of the Charles R. Bishop Trust. An active participant in the swift-moving drama which attended the fall of the Hawaiian monarchy on Jan. 17, 1893, Mr. Judd was a member of the revolutionary military forces. Public service has claimed him at various times in his career. He was formerly Commissioner of the U. S. District Court in Hawaii, served as police magistrate of Honolulu in 1904 and in 1905 and 1925 was a member of the commissions which compiled the statutory revisions of those years. He was sent to Manila in 1906 as a representative of the Hawaiian Sugar Planters’ Association, sought and gained the consent of the Philippine government to Filipino emigration and brought back with him the first Ilocano laborers. Mr. Judd served in the Hawaiian Senate, being chairman of the judiciary committee at the 1911-1913 sessions. He brought forward the frontage tax laws in 1913 and in 1919 the bill to regulate foreign language schools. During the cholera epidemic in 1895 he volunteered his services to the Territorial Board of Health and was made a district inspector. In 1900 he captained the quarantine guards during the bubonic plague, and in 1911 he was a member of the citizens’ yellow fever mosquito committee. He organized the Archives Commission, served as its secretary, and helped to organize the University Club in 1905, being its first secretary and later president. During the World war Mr. Judd was chief of examiners in the postal censorship office in Honolulu. He is a member of the Social Science Club, past president of the University Club, a member of the University Club of Manila, the Oahu Country Club and Honolulu Lodge, No. 616, Elks, of which he was the first secretary. Born in Honolulu, Dec. 20, 1874, the son of Albert Francis and Agnes Hall (Boyd) Judd, Mr. Judd attended Oahu College and in 1897 was graduated from Yale University with the degree of B. A. and in 1900 Yale Law School conferred upon him his LL.B. degree. He has practiced law in Honolulu since 1899 and is a member of the bar of Connecticut and of the Supreme Court of the United States. In 1899 Mr. Judd married Madeline Perry Hartwell and they have three children, Bernice, Dorothy and Albert Francis Judd, Jr. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/hi/statewide/bios/judd426bs.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.poppet.org/hifiles/ File size: 3.4 Kb