Charles Putnam Barnes (October 12, 1869 – December 14, 1951) was a judge and politician from Maine who served as speaker of the Maine House of Representatives from 1921 to 1922, and as justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court from April 17, 1924 to July 31, 1940. From 1939 to 1940, Barnes was Chief Justice of the court.[9]
Early life and education
Charles Putnam Barnes was born in Houlton, Maine on October 12, 1869 to Francis, a Deacon at a local Baptist Church,[10] and Isa (née Putnam) Barnes.
After graduating from Colby College, Barnes served as principal of schools in Norway and Lisbon Falls, Maine, and Attleboro, Massachusetts before becoming the superintendent of the Norway school district.[8][13] Barnes ended his 8-year career in education in 1900, and instead began studying law under Maine Supreme Judicial Court justice Joseph W. Symonds.[1]
Shortly after moving with his family once again to Norway, Barnes was admitted to the Oxford County Bar Association in 1900 and began practicing law.[8][14] He was the Oxford County attorney for five years from 1904 to 1909, and then an Assistant Attorney General of Maine for two years from 1909 to 1911.[1][15] As Assistant Attorney General, and later as State Representative, Barnes had a focus on cases of medicine, public health, and education.[16][17][12]
In 1917, Barnes was elected as a Republican to represent Maine's 7th District in Maine's lower house. As a member of the Maine House of Representatives, Barnes served on the following committees:
Judiciary Committee
Joint-Select Committee on Elections
Joint-Select Committee on Gubernatorial Vote
Joint-Select Committee on Reference of Bills
Joint-Select Committee on Resolutions Relative to the Death of Ex-President Roosevelt[19][20][4][18]
Following Barnes' success as a Representative in Maine's lower house, Governor Percival Baxter appointed him to Maine's Supreme Judicial Court as Associate Justice on April 17, 1924, to fill the seat left by George M. Hanson's death. Barnes served on the court for over 15 years before Governor Lewis Barrows promoted him to Chief Justice following the death of Chief Justice Charles J. Dunn on November 10, 1939.[1][21]
Personal life and death
Prior to his appointment to the Maine Supreme Judicial Court by Governor Baxter, Barnes had befriended Baxter. Together they traveled to the area around Mount Katahdin in hopes of promoting a future state park.[22][23]
Barnes and his wife, Annie, had 5 children together; four sons and one daughter. One of their sons, George B. Barnes, was Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives from 1945 to 1946, 23 years after Charles Barnes left office.[3] George Barnes later served in the Maine Senate from 1947 to 1953.[27]
Charles P. Barnes died at the age of 82 on December 14, 1951, in Houlton, roughly two months after his wife passed away.[28] He is buried with his wife, Annie, and his parents Francis and Isa in Houlton, Maine.[8] Barnes was a Baptist.[12]
^Whitcomb, Howard R. (2008). Governor Baxter's Magnificent Obsession: A Documentary history of Baxter State Park 1931–2006. Bangor, Maine: Friends of Baxter State Park. ISBN978-1-887940-15-3. OCLC253652001.