He met Jessie Frank Rogers, one of the daughters of Robert E. Rogers[6] and his wife (m. 12 October 1875 in Milton County, Georgia)[7] Mary Avarilla Cogburn (1858–1916),[8] and a sister of Phillip Henry Rogers (b. 23 September 1877)[9] when she was a stenographer at the county courthouse in Ada, Oklahoma.[10] They married on 3 July 1923 at the Central Presbyterian Church,[11][4] then on South Travis Street at the NE corner of Cherry Street,[12]Sherman, Grayson County, Texas. Jessie had also previously worked as a secretary for her brother-in-law Wallie, a local general practice physician.
District Judge
He was a judge from about 1924[5][better source needed] then presiding judge at the District Court of Oklahoma in Ada, Pontotoc County, Oklahoma from 1936 to 1946,[2][4][13][14] a court with general jurisdiction over almost all civil and criminal matters within its sphere of influence. To be able to go to Nuremberg he resigned from the district court, but hoped to return to Ada to practice law following the war crimes tribunals.[5] Like the other potential justices, he requested permission for his family to accompany him.
He was informally known by his middle name "Tal" and his wife Jessie Frank as "Jess".[21] Their daughter Talicia Diane Crawford (30 March 1924 in Ada, Oklahoma - 25 September 2000 in Fairfax (County?), Virginia),[22][23] married George Fitzgerald Smoot Jr. on 14 July 1943 in Escambia County, Florida, and had issue including:
^ ab"Alumni"(PDF). Sooner Magazine. 21 (12). Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma: 19. August 1949. Retrieved 20 November 2014.
^ abEmanuel, Ezekiel J.; Grady, Christine C.; Crouch, Robert A.; Lie, Reidar K.; Miller, Franklin G.; Wendler, David D. (2011). The Oxford Textbook of Clinical Research Ethics. Oxford University Press. pp. 136–140. ISBN9780199768639.