Ezra Ripley Thayer

Ezra Ripley Thayer (February 21, 1866 – September 14, 1915) was an attorney, Dane Professor of Law, and Dean of the Harvard Law School from 1910 to 1915.

Ezra Ripley Thayer
Born(1866-02-21)February 21, 1866
DiedSeptember 14, 1915(1915-09-14) (aged 49)
Resting placeHingham Center Cemetery, Hingham, Massachusetts
EducationHarvard University
OccupationAttorney
Known forDean of Harvard Law School
SpouseEthel Randolph Clark (m. 1898-1915, his death)
Children3 (including Polly)

Early life

Ezra Ripley Thayer was born in Milton, Massachusetts on February 21, 1866 to Harvard Law School professor James Bradley Thayer, and Sophia Bradford (Ripley) Thayer. His oldest brother William Sydney Thayer became a professor of medicine. He attended public schools in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and studied abroad with a tutor for a year in Athens, Greece. Upon his return, he entered Harvard College with the class of 1888. After graduation, Thayer attended Harvard Law School, where he graduated with an LL.B. in 1891.[1]

He married Ethel Randolph Clark on June 23, 1898 and had three children: James Bradley Thayer (1899–1976), Eleanor Arnold Thayer (1902–1923), and Polly (1904–2006).

Law career

Thayer served as Secretary to Justice Horace Gray, U.S. Supreme Court in 1892. He practiced law in Boston with the firm of Brandeis, Dunbar, and Nutter from 1893–1900. Then, from 1900–1910 he moved to the Boston firm of Storey, Thorndike, Palmer and Thayer.

In 1910, Thayer was appointed as Dean of Harvard Law School, succeeding James Barr Ames, who had died in January of that year. In 1913, he declined an offer to be appointed to the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.

Suffering from acute depression, he is thought to have committed suicide at the age of 49. After two days of being missing, his body was found in the Charles River.[2]

Connection to Cole Porter

Cole Porter, the famous American songwriter, was enrolled in Harvard Law School in 1913. Porter did not take to the study of law. Porter met with Thayer, who was Dean at the time. Thayer suggested that Porter should switch schools and instead enroll at Harvard's music school, which was obviously Porter's true calling. Porter took Thayer's advice and secretly transferred to the music program.[3]

See also

References

  1. Dunbar, William H.; Pound, Roscoe. "Ezra Ripley Thayer," Harvard Law Review, Vol. 29, No. 1 (Nov. 1915), pp. 1–12, accessed August 16, 2013
  2. "DEAN THAYER A SUICIDE. Head of Harvard Law School Had Suffered Nervous Breakdown". The New York Times. 17 September 1915. p. 11.
  3. Shaftel, Matthew. "From Inspiration to Archive: Cole Porter's 'Night and Day'", Journal of Music Theory, Duke University Press, Volume 43, No. 2 (Autumn, 1999), pp. 315, 318 accessed August 16, 2013 (subscriptionrequired)

Further reading

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