Arnold Wilson Cowen, also known as Wilson Cowen, was successively a trial commissioner, a trial judge, and the chief judge of the appellate division of the United States Court of Claims. Subsequently, he became a senior circuit judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Wilson Cowen was born in Norse, not far from Clifton, in Bosque County, Texas. He excelled in high school and won a scholarship to the University of Texas at Austin. In 1928 he received his LL.B.

PropertyValue
dbpedia-owl:Person/birthDate
  • 1905-12-20 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:Person/birthPlace
dbpedia-owl:Person/deathDate
  • 2007-10-28 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:Person/deathPlace
dbpedia-owl:birthDate
  • 1905-12-20 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:birthPlace
dbpedia-owl:deathDate
  • 2007-10-28 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:deathPlace
dbpprop:abstract
  • Arnold Wilson Cowen, also known as Wilson Cowen, was successively a trial commissioner, a trial judge, and the chief judge of the appellate division of the United States Court of Claims. Subsequently, he became a senior circuit judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Wilson Cowen was born in Norse, not far from Clifton, in Bosque County, Texas. He excelled in high school and won a scholarship to the University of Texas at Austin. In 1928 he received his LL.B. from the University of Texas School of Law. He won election as a county judge of Dallam County, Texas, as a Democrat in 1934. Dallam County was hard hit by the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl, and Cowen found himself involved in federal programs to ameliorate conditions in the region. He was appointed in 1938 to the Farm Security Administration. He became a trial commissioner at the Court of Claims in 1942, but took a leave of absence the following year to serve as Assistant War Food Administrator. He returned to the Court in 1945, and was appointed chief trial commissioner in 1959. President Lyndon B. Johnson nominated him in 1964 to take the place of Chief Judge Marvin Jones, who was retiring. He assumed the status of senior judge in 1977, and became a senior circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit by operation of the Federal Courts Improvement Act in 1982. He retired from active service in 1997. Judge Cowen was interviewed to describe his experiences of the Dust Bowl for the television series The American Experience in a documentary entitled "Surviving the Dust Bowl", which aired in 1998.
dbpprop:birthDate
dbpprop:birthPlace
dbpprop:deathDate
dbpprop:deathPlace
dbpprop:hasPhotoCollection
dbpprop:imdbTitleProperty
  • 376907 (xsd:integer)
dbpprop:name
  • Arnold Wilson Cowen
dbpprop:occupation
  • Judge
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Arnold Wilson Cowen, also known as Wilson Cowen, was successively a trial commissioner, a trial judge, and the chief judge of the appellate division of the United States Court of Claims. Subsequently, he became a senior circuit judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Wilson Cowen was born in Norse, not far from Clifton, in Bosque County, Texas. He excelled in high school and won a scholarship to the University of Texas at Austin. In 1928 he received his LL.B.
rdfs:label
  • Arnold Wilson Cowen
owl:sameAs
skos:subject
foaf:name
  • Arnold Wilson Cowen
foaf:page
is dbpprop:redirect of
is owl:sameAs of