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Ezra Ripley Thayer

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Ezra Ripley Thayer

Birth
Milton, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
14 Sep 1915 (aged 49)
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Hingham, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Parents: James Bradley and Sophia Bradford (Ripley) Thayer. Husband of Ethel Randolph (Clark) Thayer. Married: June 23, 1898 in Pomfret, CT.

He was the Dean of the School of Law, Harvard University from 1910 - 1915.

Ezra Ripley Thayer, for four years Dean of the Harvard Law School, died suddenly on Tuesday, September 14, 1915, less than two weeks before the opening of the term. From the tributes in another part of this issue may be gained an appreciation of the incalculable sense of loss which his death has left among the legal profession as a whole, as well as among the friends of the Law School. The loss was felt no less keenly among the students of the School. Indeed it is not easy to express in words the personal sorrow of those whom academic work had brought into intimate contact with him. Among the many treasures which these men will carry away from their course at the Law School there are few that they will prize more highly than the memory of Dean Thayer as a teach, a legal scholar, and a friend.

From the Harvard Law Review Dated November 1, 1915.
Parents: James Bradley and Sophia Bradford (Ripley) Thayer. Husband of Ethel Randolph (Clark) Thayer. Married: June 23, 1898 in Pomfret, CT.

He was the Dean of the School of Law, Harvard University from 1910 - 1915.

Ezra Ripley Thayer, for four years Dean of the Harvard Law School, died suddenly on Tuesday, September 14, 1915, less than two weeks before the opening of the term. From the tributes in another part of this issue may be gained an appreciation of the incalculable sense of loss which his death has left among the legal profession as a whole, as well as among the friends of the Law School. The loss was felt no less keenly among the students of the School. Indeed it is not easy to express in words the personal sorrow of those whom academic work had brought into intimate contact with him. Among the many treasures which these men will carry away from their course at the Law School there are few that they will prize more highly than the memory of Dean Thayer as a teach, a legal scholar, and a friend.

From the Harvard Law Review Dated November 1, 1915.


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