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Individual Record for: Abraham Lincoln Marovitz (male)

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  Joseph Marovitz      Family Record
Abraham Lincoln Marovitz      Family Record  
 
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Event Date Details
Birth 10 AUG 1905 Place: Oshkosh, Winnebago, Wisconsin
Source:
Wisconsin State Board of Health - Births
Quality: Secondary
Source Text: WINN 315-2993 and WINN 316-416: birth recorded twice per WI State Birth I ndex microfiche at FHC. No other Marovitz pre-1907 births or marriages
Source:
Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory (Sk Pub Lib Ref 923 M1969, 2 vol)
born 1905, JD 1927 Asst State's atty, Chgo 1927-1932 private practice
with Rittenhouse, Marovitz & Wallenstein Senator: 19th Dist of IL US
Dist Ct Judge home 1323 Independence Blvd office: 134 N LaSalle St
born Oshkosh WI fa Joseph mo Rachel GLOWITZ [see 1945 & 1950 Who's
Who in Chicago and Illinois] [see Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory in 5
volumes, 101st edition, 1969]
Source:
Horatio Alger Association
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Born in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, Marovitz was the son of Lithuanian immigran ts. At age 5, he moved with his parents to Chicago, where his father op ened a small tailor shop and his mother ran a candy store. The family o f seven lived in three rooms behind the store. At age 17, he was workin g as office boy in a law firm. To pick up extra money, he entered boxin g matches. One evening, he left the ring with "a shiner and a cut lip." H is boss learned of it and encouraged him to give up boxing and pursue a l aw degree. The boss also gave him $240 for a year?s tuition and raised h is salary from $8 to $10 per week. Marovitz went on to a long, colorful c areer as assistant state?s attorney, trial lawyer, state senator and st ate and federal judge. At 93, after 48 years on the bench, he is still a s enior judge and remains one of Chicago?s most beloved and respected cit izens.
Source:
Social Security Death Index
Quality: Secondary
Source Text: ABRAHAM L MAROVITZ b 10 Aug 1905 d 17 Mar 2001 res 60657 (Chicago, Coo k, IL) benefit (none specified) SSN 344-18-6653 issued Illinois
Death ABT 17 MAR 2001 Place: Chicago, Cook, Illinois
Notes:
Federal Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz dies at age 95

Mike Robinson : The Associated Press : March 17, 2001

U.S. District Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz, one of the best-known fig ures on the federal bench in Chicago for almost three decades, died Sat urday in his North Side home after a long illness. He was 95.

A favorite of Chicago Democratic politicians, he swore in Richard J. Da ley as mayor of Chicago six times. He administered the same mayoral oat h to Daley's son, Richard M. Daley, three times.

Marovitz owed much of his rise from office boy in a law firm to federal j udge to help from legendary Democratic leader Jacob Arvey.

A popular after-dinner speaker, Marovitz quipped to audiences that he h ad "climbed Jacob's ladder" on his way to the federal bench.

Mayor Richard M. Daley, marching in Chicago's St. Patrick's Day parade S aturday, paused to express his sadness.

"We used to call him Uncle Abe because he was my dad's best friend," Da ley said.

Marovitz "always went out of his way to help people," the mayor said. " He did so many kind things, especially with young lawyers and young law c lerks."

Marvin E. Aspen, chief judge of the U.S. District Court, called Marovit z "a Chicago icon."

"He had a profound influence on the lives of countless Chicagoans, from t he most famous to the most humble," Aspen said.

Marovitz was born Aug. 10, 1905, in Oshkosh, Wis., to Jewish immigrant p arents. The family moved to Chicago's historic Maxwell Street area when h e was five. As a teen, he became an office boy in a law firm.

One of the partners, impressed at seeing young Marovitz fight in an ama teur boxing match, helped to pay his law school tuition.

Marovitz was an assistant state's attorney from 1927 to 1933 when he we nt into private practice. Clients who became friends included Bob Hope, F rank Sinatra and Jimmy Durante.

Marovitz was elected to the Illinois Senate in 1938.

At the outbreak of World War II, Marovitz, then 38, enlisted in the Mar ine Corps and served in the Pacific where he suffered shrapnel wounds. H e was a sergeant major when he was discharged in 1946.

Marovitz was elected Superior Court judge in 1950 and was chief justice o f the criminal court in 1958 and 1959. He was named to the federal benc h in 1963 and took senior status a dozen years later but continued to p reside over cases until 1990.

Source:
Social Security Death Index
Quality: Secondary
Source Text: ABRAHAM L MAROVITZ b 10 Aug 1905 d 17 Mar 2001 res 60657 (Chicago, Coo k, IL) benefit (none specified) SSN 344-18-6653 issued Illinois
Census 7 JAN 1920 Place: Chicago, Cook, Illinois
Source:
1920 IL Federal Census
Quality: Secondary
Source Text: 1920 Chicago, Cook, Illinois: Roll: T625_319 Page: 7B ED: 628 Image: 00 94
7 January 1920, 1100 Laflin St, dwelling 53, family 78
Merovitz??, Joseph head, owns with mortgage, 47, imm 1883, naturalized 1 892, lit, b Russia of Russian parents speaking Jewish
Ray, wife, 45, imm 1883, naturalized 1891, lit, b Russia of Russian par ents speaking Jewish
Josette?, dau, 19, single, lit, b IL
Bessie, dau, 17, single, lit, b IL
Harold, son, 16, in school, lit, b IL
Abe, son, 15, in school, lit, b IL
Sidney, son, 9, in school, lit, b IL
Census 14 APR 1930 Place: Chicago, Cook, Illinois
Source:
1930 IL Federal Census
Quality: Secondary
Source Text: 1930 Chicago, Cook, Illinois: Roll: T626_456 Page: 25A ED: 917 Image: 0 609
14 April 1930, 1507 Elburn Avenue, dwelling 372, family 451
Marovitz, Joseph, head, rents $25, radio, 57, married age 26, lit, b Ru ssian Lithuania-Kovno of Russian Lithuania-Kovno parents speaking Jewis h, imm 1890, naturalized, speaks English, tailor in tailor shop, owner, n ot a veteran
Rae, wife, 55, married age 24, lit, b Russian Lithuania-Kovno of Russia n Lithuania-Kovno speaking Jewish, imm 1888, naturalized, speaks Englis h
Bessie, dau, 28, single, lit, b IL, statistics clerk in a telegraph off ice for wages
Abraham, son, 24, single, lit, b WI, attorney /assistant for States, fo r wages
Sidney, son, 19, single, lit, b IL, no job
Mollie, sister, 40, single, lit b Russian Lithuania-Kovno of Russian Li thuania-Kovno speaking Jewish, speaks English, machine operator for wag es
Living 1999
Source:
Newspaper article
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Sept 1999: PNR Radio report on naturalization uin Chicago reported that A be Marovitz is 93 and still performs his judicial duties at the swearin g-in ceremonies for new immigrants.
Misc  
Source:
Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory (Sk Pub Lib Ref 923 M1969, 2 vol)
born 1905, JD 1927 Asst State's atty, Chgo 1927-1932 private practice
with Rittenhouse, Marovitz & Wallenstein Senator: 19th Dist of IL US
Dist Ct Judge home 1323 Independence Blvd office: 134 N LaSalle St
born Oshkosh WI fa Joseph mo Rachel GLOWITZ [see 1945 & 1950 Who's
Who in Chicago and Illinois] [see Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory in 5
volumes, 101st edition, 1969]
Misc  
Notes:
http://innsofcourt.org/innshome/30227/30227.htm
Abraham Lincoln Marovitz Inn of Court
Our Inn is named for Senior Federal Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz of t he United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. J udge Marovitz is one of the most
remarkable Chicagoans living today: a man who graduated from law school a t the age of 19, was elected to the Illinois State Senate in 1939, enli sted in the Marine Corps at age 38 and served in the Pacific theater, b ecame an Illinois Superior Court judge in 1950, was elected Chief Justi ce of the Criminal Court and, on October 1, 1963, following nomination b y President John F. Kennedy, was sworn in as a United States District J udge. Although he assumed senior status in 1975, Judge Marovitz can sti ll be found working in his chambers nearly every day. His kindness, war mth and dignity have been honored by numerous organizations, of which w e are only one, but in naming our Inn for Judge Marovitz we hope to mar k his presence as the civilized lawyer.
Source:
Horatio Alger Association
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Born in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, Marovitz was the son of Lithuanian immigran ts. At age 5, he moved with his parents to Chicago, where his father op ened a small tailor shop and his mother ran a candy store. The family o f seven lived in three rooms behind the store. At age 17, he was workin g as office boy in a law firm. To pick up extra money, he entered boxin g matches. One evening, he left the ring with "a shiner and a cut lip." H is boss learned of it and encouraged him to give up boxing and pursue a l aw degree. The boss also gave him $240 for a year?s tuition and raised h is salary from $8 to $10 per week. Marovitz went on to a long, colorful c areer as assistant state?s attorney, trial lawyer, state senator and st ate and federal judge. At 93, after 48 years on the bench, he is still a s enior judge and remains one of Chicago?s most beloved and respected cit izens.
Source:
published biography
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: http://innsofcourt.org/innshome/30227/30227.htm
Abraham Lincoln Marovitz Inn of Court
Our Inn is named for Senior Federal Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz of t he United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
Misc  
Notes:
Honorable gift
By DOUG POKORSKI
STAFF WRITER
A collection of more than 500 books, pamphlets and artwork related to A braham Lincoln was donated Monday to the Lincoln Presidential Library a nd Museum.
The collection, amassed over a lifetime by the late Judge Abraham Linco ln Marovitz, was donated to the state of Illinois by the late judge's e state.
In a ceremony at the Old State Capitol, Illinois first lady Lura Lynn R yan said that, of all the donations that have been made to the presiden tial library, the Marovitz collection was "the one most dear to me."
"Abraham Lincoln Marovitz was a dear friend of mine," Ryan said. "(He) h ad a record of public service that spanned most of the past century. He w as the most recognized, most respected and well-loved public figure in I llinois for many decades."
The Marovitz collection includes 450 books and pamphlets, more than 100 p rints and photographs and more than 30 pieces of sculpture.
Several early Illinois lawbooks are part of the collection, including a c opy of the laws passed by the 10th General Assembly from 1837-39 that w as owned by David Davis, a state judge and political associate of Linco ln's whom the 16th president appointed to the Supreme Court of the Unit ed States in 1862.
Marovitz owned every book about Lincoln's legal career and every signif icant scholarly biography of Lincoln.
State Historian Tom Schwartz said the printed items in the collection a re important not only for the information they contain, but also becaus e of what they reveal about Marovitz himself. For example, a copy of a 1 973 biography of Lincoln's rival Stephen A. Douglas was given to Marovi tz by his lifelong friend Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley.
Daley inscribed the book with the following: "I thought you would enjoy t he new biography of Stephen A. Douglas, the 'Little Giant,' who in my o pinion is the outstanding Democratic leader in the history of Illinois. "
The son of Lithuanian immigrants, Marovitz was born in Oshkosh, Wis., i n 1905. His mother named him after Lincoln because she had been impress ed with Lincoln's character after hearing about him at a New York settl ement house lecture.
Marovitz often remarked that his mother thought Lincoln was Jewish beca use John Wilkes Booth shot him in the temple.
Marovitz's family later moved to Chicago, and he enrolled in Chicago-Ke nt College of Law at the age of 16. At 22, he became the youngest perso n to serve as a Cook County assistant state's attorney.
In private practice, he represented labor leaders and some of the most n otorious gangsters in the city, including North Side boss Ted Newberry, c onfidence man Willie Bioff and Gus Winkler, who was believed to have be en one of the machine gunners at the St. Valentine's Day massacre.
Marovitz became the first Jew to be elected to the Illinois Senate in 1 938. Remembering prejudices he had suffered as a youth, he helped intro duce the state's first fair employment legislation barring discriminati on based on race, religion or sex.
Marovitz left the state Senate to serve in the U.S. Marines during Worl d War II. He was wounded during combat in the Philippines but turned do wn a Purple Heart because he said other soldiers were injured more seri ously.
After the war, Marovitz returned to the Senate and was later a Cook Cou nty Criminal Court judge. In 1963, President John F. Kennedy appointed h im federal judge for the Northern District of Illinois. He died in Marc h 2001 at the age of 95.
Ryan said it was fitting that the Marovitz collection become a part of t he new Lincoln Presidential Library. The core of the library is the Hen ry Horner Lincoln Collection, a part of what is now the Illinois State H istorical Library. Marovitz was a trustee of the State Historical Libra ry from 1961 to 1969.

Source:
Newspaper article
Page: The State Journal-Register [IL]     Quality: Secondary
Source Text: The State Journal-Register
http://showcase.netins.net/web/creative/lincoln/news/marovitz.htm
Misc  
Notes:
Deeds were his creed

"You're leaving home with your self respect. Make sure you come home wi th it, too." With that admonition U rather than "Have a nice day" or "E njoy the journey" U Abe Marovitz went off to school or work with the st ern words of his father, Joseph, ringing in his ears.

Later on, he took them to heart, along with mom Rachel's request that h e "do a little mitzvah every day." Throughout his life, the judge wore h is parents' pictures on his cufflinks, just in case he had to be remind ed to make them proud of him.

It was that familial bond that saved him from having to answer anything b ut "Yes!" to the questions in a favorite poem: "Is anybody happier beca use you passed his way? Does anyone remember that you spoke to him toda y?"

A mitzvah a day was a minimum requirement. In fact, somebody up there m ight just be tallying the Abraham Lincoln Marovitz record and learning w ith amazement that he did more than a hundred thousand good deeds, big a nd small, during the eight decades of his adult life.

You remember the surprise phone calls U a birthday, a death in the fami ly, a small achievement or a big disappointment that made news, or his g ratitude for a blessing received.

My first was a hastily scribbled, almost cryptic "Mazeltov!" soon after t he ISBA announced in 1987 that it would honor me with a Board of Govern ors Award. "I judge better than I write," he added, and I could feel th e twinkle.

My precedent admiration for Abe dated to 1985, when he officiated at th e installation of Fred Lane as ISBA president. That was a time, before F red prevailed in his disagreement with the ARDC, when no Supreme Court j ustice would administer the oath. Judge Marovitz would, without questio n, and did so with gusto.

Thereafter, it occurred to me that hardly a major law-related event in t he Chicago area was credible unless Abraham Lincoln Marovitz was there U o ften on the way from another to still others on the same day or night.

His peripatetic presence was inspired partly by a love for the collegia lity of his brothers and sisters of the bar and charities, and partly b y the need to endorse the efforts of those who labored for the good cau ses and worthy initiatives that made life comfortable for the afflicted .

By contrast, Abe Marovitz could have been moved to afflict the comforta ble U the pretentious phonies and immoral opportunists U but he would s uffer one of them no public censure. Instead, he'd go home and thank Go d for "making me the way I am and not like that miserable S.O.B."

The judge could be tough, but in a helping way. Charlie Winkler tells t he story of one of his first cases, a dram shop matter in front of Supe rior Court Judge Marovitz in 1962. The jurist took exception to apparen t inconsistent testimony in the plaintiff's deposition.

"He didn't like the tone of it, and he chewed me out after telling the c ourt reporter to take a break," Winkler recalls. "Judge Marovitz said h e wanted me to be a good lawyer; he threw the case out, but he was nice a bout it."

Fred Lane remembers seeing the judge walking the courthouse hallways, r obe over his arm, visiting with people involved in cases to see if he c ould explain the process or reassure those who seemed upset. "He would h ave been a great mediator," Lane said.

And so he was, when you think about it. Abe Marovitz was always trying t o bring people together to support programs that would uplift other peo ple, instill pride in the helpless and homeless, or keep kids from goin g astray. Scholarships were endowed for "minimally qualified indigent s tudents like me," he'd say.

Most of all, especially during his senior status as a federal judge, Ab e Marovitz took pride in the heartfelt feelings he shared with countles s classes of immigrants who looked forward with great hope to the rites a nd rights of citizenship. How many? Fifty thousand is a conservative gu ess.

Each ceremony, and perhaps each new American, evoked memories of his Li thuanian father and Russian mother who sought a better life, free of op pression, for the Marovitz family on our soil. Abe surely thought he ow ed Joseph and Rachel for the sacrifices they made and the lessons they t aught him, and he made so many others like them feel welcome here.

The poem we quoted from in the third paragraph ends with another questi on: "As you close your eyes in slumber, do you think that God will say, ' You have earned one more tomorrow by the work you did today'?"

Abraham Lincoln Marovitz truly earned more than 34,000 tomorrows, and h e invested them wisely in selfless service to the community he loved an d respected.
Source:
Newspaper article
Page: Illinois Bar Association     Quality: Secondary
Source Text: http://www.illinoisbar.org/Association/014-2g.htm
Misc 20 MAR 2001
Source:
IL City of Chicago Resolution
Quality: Primary
Source Text: RESOLUTION
Sponsored by
THE HONORABLE JOHN P. DALEY, PRESIDENT JOHN H. STROGER, JR. AND TED LEC HOWICZ, COUNTY COMMISSIONERS

Co-Sponsored by
THE HONORABLE JERRY BUTLER, ALLAN C. CARR, EARLEAN COLLINS, GREGG GOSLI N, CARL R. HANSEN, ROBERTO MALDONADO, WILLIAM R. MORAN, JOSEPH MARIO MO RENO, MIKE QUIGLEY, HERBERT T. SCHUMANN, JR., PETER N. SILVESTRI, DEBOR AH SIMS, BOBBIE L. STEELE AND CALVIN R. SUTKER, COUNTY COMMISSIONERS

WHEREAS Almighty God in His infinite wisdom has called from our midst, A braham Lincoln Marovitz born into time August 10, 1905 born into eterni ty March 17, 2001, and

WHEREAS Abraham Lincoln Marovitz was the beloved brother of the late Je annette Bernard, Bess (the late Jack) Marovitz, Harold (the late Gertru de) Marovitz and Sydney (the late Jane) Marovitz, and

WHEREAS Abraham Lincoln Marovitz was the devoted uncle of Adrienne Garm an, Sanford (Nora) Marovitz, James (Gail) Marovitz, William (Christi He fner) Marovitz, Robert (Deb) Marovitz, the late Howard (Ruth) Bernard, I van Marovitz and Jerald Marovitz, and

WHEREAS Abraham Lincoln Marovitz was the loving great-uncle of Iris (St eve) Halpern, Deborah Bernard, Mark (Holly) Garman, Reni (Josh Orlan) G arman, Tony (Thelma) Marovitz, Richard (Michelle) Marovitz, Andrew (Lau rel) Marovitz and Scott Marovitz, and

WHEREAS Abraham Lincoln Marovitz began his distinguished legal career a s a clerk for the predecessor of the Chicago firm Mayer, Brown and Plat t, and was instantly recognized by the senior partners as a young man w ith great potential, and

WHEREAS Abraham Lincoln Marovitz graduated from law school in 1925 at t he age of 19, and became an Assistant State's Attorney at age 22, the y oungest person to hold such a title, and

WHEREAS Abraham Lincoln Marovitz was elected to the Illinois State Sena te in 1938, where he quickly established a reputation as a thoughtful a nd compassionate legislator, who lead the fight against discrimination b y helping to pass the State's First Fair Employment Act, and

WHEREAS Abraham Lincoln Marovitz bravely answered the call of his count ry during the Second World War, temporarily leaving his Senate seat to j oin the Marines, where he saw combat in the South Pacific, and

WHEREAS Abraham Lincoln Marovitz served the Cook County judicial system f or 13 years, including a term as Chief Justice of the Criminal Court, a nd was appointed by President Kennedy to the federal bench in 1963, and

WHEREAS Abraham Lincoln Marovitz remained active as a federal jurist lo ng after he retired from presiding over trials, and his claim to have s worn in more new American citizens than any other judge in history is u nchallenged, and

WHEREAS all who knew him will attest that Abraham Lincoln Marovitz was a u nique and remarkable man, a humanitarian, a natural leader with a singu lar dedication to his fellow man, admired and respected by all of Chica go, and dearly loved by his relatives, now therefore

BE IT RESOLVED by the Board of Commissioners of Cook County that the Bo ard does hereby offer its deepest condolences and most heartfelt sympat hy to the family and many friends of Abraham Lincoln Marovitz, and join s them in sorrow at this time of loss, and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that this text be spread upon the official proce edings of this Honorable Body, and a suitable copy of same be tendered t o the family of Abraham Lincoln Marovitz, that his memory may be so hon ored and ever cherished.

Approved and adopted this 20th day of March 2001

JOHN H. STROGER, JR., President
Cook County Board of Commissioners
(S E A L)
Attest: DAVID ORR, County Clerk
Obituary 17 MAR 2001 Place: Chicago, Cook, Illinois
Notes:
Federal Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz dies at age 95
Mike Robinson , The Associated Press
March 17, 2001
U.S. District Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz, one of the best-known fig ures on the federal bench in Chicago for almost three decades, died Sat urday in his North Side home after a long illness. He was 95.
A favorite of Chicago Democratic politicians, he swore in Richard J. Da ley as mayor of Chicago six times. He administered the same mayoral oat h to Daley's son, Richard M. Daley, three times.
Marovitz owed much of his rise from office boy in a law firm to federal j udge to help from legendary Democratic leader Jacob Arvey.
A popular after-dinner speaker, Marovitz quipped to audiences that he h ad "climbed Jacob's ladder" on his way to the federal bench.
Mayor Richard M. Daley, marching in Chicago's St. Patrick's Day parade S aturday, paused to express his sadness.
"We used to call him Uncle Abe because he was my dad's best friend," Da ley said.
Marovitz "always went out of his way to help people," the mayor said. " He did so many kind things, especially with young lawyers and young law c lerks."
Marvin E. Aspen, chief judge of the U.S. District Court, called Marovit z "a Chicago icon."
"He had a profound influence on the lives of countless Chicagoans, from t he most famous to the most humble," Aspen said.
Marovitz was born Aug. 10, 1905, in Oshkosh, Wis., to Jewish immigrant p arents. The family moved to Chicago's historic Maxwell Street area when h e was five. As a teen, he became an office boy in a law firm.
One of the partners, impressed at seeing young Marovitz fight in an ama teur boxing match, helped to pay his law school tuition.
Marovitz was an assistant state's attorney from 1927 to 1933 when he we nt into private practice. Clients who became friends included Bob Hope, F rank Sinatra and Jimmy Durante.
Marovitz was elected to the Illinois Senate in 1938.
At the outbreak of World War II, Marovitz, then 38, enlisted in the Mar ine Corps and served in the Pacific where he suffered shrapnel wounds. H e was a sergeant major when he was discharged in 1946.
Marovitz was elected Superior Court judge in 1950 and was chief justice o f the criminal court in 1958 and 1959. He was named to the federal benc h in 1963 and took senior status a dozen years later but continued to p reside over cases until 1990.
Yahrzeit    
Military Servic 1943
Source:
published biography
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: http://innsofcourt.org/innshome/30227/30227.htm
Abraham Lincoln Marovitz Inn of Court
Our Inn is named for Senior Federal Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz of t he United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

Attribute Details
Residence 1323 Independence Blvd
Source:
Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory (Sk Pub Lib Ref 923 M1969, 2 vol)
born 1905, JD 1927 Asst State's atty, Chgo 1927-1932 private practice
with Rittenhouse, Marovitz & Wallenstein Senator: 19th Dist of IL US
Dist Ct Judge home 1323 Independence Blvd office: 134 N LaSalle St
born Oshkosh WI fa Joseph mo Rachel GLOWITZ [see 1945 & 1950 Who's
Who in Chicago and Illinois] [see Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory in 5
volumes, 101st edition, 1969]
Residence
Source:
Horatio Alger Association
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Born in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, Marovitz was the son of Lithuanian immigran ts. At age 5, he moved with his parents to Chicago, where his father op ened a small tailor shop and his mother ran a candy store. The family o f seven lived in three rooms behind the store. At age 17, he was workin g as office boy in a law firm. To pick up extra money, he entered boxin g matches. One evening, he left the ring with "a shiner and a cut lip." H is boss learned of it and encouraged him to give up boxing and pursue a l aw degree. The boss also gave him $240 for a year?s tuition and raised h is salary from $8 to $10 per week. Marovitz went on to a long, colorful c areer as assistant state?s attorney, trial lawyer, state senator and st ate and federal judge. At 93, after 48 years on the bench, he is still a s enior judge and remains one of Chicago?s most beloved and respected cit izens.
Residence 1100 Laflin St
Source:
1920 IL Federal Census
Quality: Secondary
Source Text: 1920 Chicago, Cook, Illinois: Roll: T625_319 Page: 7B ED: 628 Image: 00 94
7 January 1920, 1100 Laflin St, dwelling 53, family 78
Merovitz??, Joseph head, owns with mortgage, 47, imm 1883, naturalized 1 892, lit, b Russia of Russian parents speaking Jewish
Ray, wife, 45, imm 1883, naturalized 1891, lit, b Russia of Russian par ents speaking Jewish
Josette?, dau, 19, single, lit, b IL
Bessie, dau, 17, single, lit, b IL
Harold, son, 16, in school, lit, b IL
Abe, son, 15, in school, lit, b IL
Sidney, son, 9, in school, lit, b IL
Residence 1507 Elburn Avenue
Source:
1930 IL Federal Census
Quality: Secondary
Source Text: 1930 Chicago, Cook, Illinois: Roll: T626_456 Page: 25A ED: 917 Image: 0 609
14 April 1930, 1507 Elburn Avenue, dwelling 372, family 451
Marovitz, Joseph, head, rents $25, radio, 57, married age 26, lit, b Ru ssian Lithuania-Kovno of Russian Lithuania-Kovno parents speaking Jewis h, imm 1890, naturalized, speaks English, tailor in tailor shop, owner, n ot a veteran
Rae, wife, 55, married age 24, lit, b Russian Lithuania-Kovno of Russia n Lithuania-Kovno speaking Jewish, imm 1888, naturalized, speaks Englis h
Bessie, dau, 28, single, lit, b IL, statistics clerk in a telegraph off ice for wages
Abraham, son, 24, single, lit, b WI, attorney /assistant for States, fo r wages
Sidney, son, 19, single, lit, b IL, no job
Mollie, sister, 40, single, lit b Russian Lithuania-Kovno of Russian Li thuania-Kovno speaking Jewish, speaks English, machine operator for wag es
Occupation lawyer
Notes:
private practice with Rittenhouse, Marovitz & Wallenstein, office 134 N L aSalle St
Source:
Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory (Sk Pub Lib Ref 923 M1969, 2 vol)
born 1905, JD 1927 Asst State's atty, Chgo 1927-1932 private practice
with Rittenhouse, Marovitz & Wallenstein Senator: 19th Dist of IL US
Dist Ct Judge home 1323 Independence Blvd office: 134 N LaSalle St
born Oshkosh WI fa Joseph mo Rachel GLOWITZ [see 1945 & 1950 Who's
Who in Chicago and Illinois] [see Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory in 5
volumes, 101st edition, 1969]
Occupation Asst State's atty
Source:
Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory (Sk Pub Lib Ref 923 M1969, 2 vol)
born 1905, JD 1927 Asst State's atty, Chgo 1927-1932 private practice
with Rittenhouse, Marovitz & Wallenstein Senator: 19th Dist of IL US
Dist Ct Judge home 1323 Independence Blvd office: 134 N LaSalle St
born Oshkosh WI fa Joseph mo Rachel GLOWITZ [see 1945 & 1950 Who's
Who in Chicago and Illinois] [see Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory in 5
volumes, 101st edition, 1969]
Source:
1930 IL Federal Census
Quality: Secondary
Source Text: 1930 Chicago, Cook, Illinois: Roll: T626_456 Page: 25A ED: 917 Image: 0 609
14 April 1930, 1507 Elburn Avenue, dwelling 372, family 451
Marovitz, Joseph, head, rents $25, radio, 57, married age 26, lit, b Ru ssian Lithuania-Kovno of Russian Lithuania-Kovno parents speaking Jewis h, imm 1890, naturalized, speaks English, tailor in tailor shop, owner, n ot a veteran
Rae, wife, 55, married age 24, lit, b Russian Lithuania-Kovno of Russia n Lithuania-Kovno speaking Jewish, imm 1888, naturalized, speaks Englis h
Bessie, dau, 28, single, lit, b IL, statistics clerk in a telegraph off ice for wages
Abraham, son, 24, single, lit, b WI, attorney /assistant for States, fo r wages
Sidney, son, 19, single, lit, b IL, no job
Mollie, sister, 40, single, lit b Russian Lithuania-Kovno of Russian Li thuania-Kovno speaking Jewish, speaks English, machine operator for wag es
Occupation Illinois State Senate: 19th Dist
Source:
published biography
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: http://innsofcourt.org/innshome/30227/30227.htm
Abraham Lincoln Marovitz Inn of Court
Our Inn is named for Senior Federal Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz of t he United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
Source:
Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory (Sk Pub Lib Ref 923 M1969, 2 vol)
born 1905, JD 1927 Asst State's atty, Chgo 1927-1932 private practice
with Rittenhouse, Marovitz & Wallenstein Senator: 19th Dist of IL US
Dist Ct Judge home 1323 Independence Blvd office: 134 N LaSalle St
born Oshkosh WI fa Joseph mo Rachel GLOWITZ [see 1945 & 1950 Who's
Who in Chicago and Illinois] [see Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory in 5
volumes, 101st edition, 1969]
Occupation Illinois Superior Court judge
Source:
published biography
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: http://innsofcourt.org/innshome/30227/30227.htm
Abraham Lincoln Marovitz Inn of Court
Our Inn is named for Senior Federal Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz of t he United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
Occupation Chief Justice of the Criminal Court
Source:
published biography
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: http://innsofcourt.org/innshome/30227/30227.htm
Abraham Lincoln Marovitz Inn of Court
Our Inn is named for Senior Federal Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz of t he United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
Occupation United States District Judge
Source:
published biography
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: http://innsofcourt.org/innshome/30227/30227.htm
Abraham Lincoln Marovitz Inn of Court
Our Inn is named for Senior Federal Judge Abraham Lincoln Marovitz of t he United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
Source:
Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory
Quality: Questionable
Source Text: Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory (Sk Pub Lib Ref 923 M1969, 2 vol)
born 1905, JD 1927 Asst State's atty, Chgo 1927-1932 private practice
with Rittenhouse, Marovitz & Wallenstein Senator: 19th Dist of IL US
Dist Ct Judge home 1323 Independence Blvd office: 134 N LaSalle St
born Oshkosh WI fa Joseph mo Rachel GLOWITZ [see 1945 & 1950 Who's
Who in Chicago and Illinois] [see Martindale-Hubbel Law Directory in 5
volumes, 101st edition, 1969]
Soc. Sec. No. 344-18-6653 issued Illinois
Source:
Social Security Death Index
Quality: Secondary
Source Text: ABRAHAM L MAROVITZ b 10 Aug 1905 d 17 Mar 2001 res 60657 (Chicago, Coo k, IL) benefit (none specified) SSN 344-18-6653 issued Illinois
Source:
GEDCOM file imported on 2 Apr 2006

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