Henry Stockbridge Jr.


Henry Stockbridge Jr. was a United States [House of Representatives|U.S. Representative] from Maryland.
Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Stockbridge attended public and private schools and Williston Academy of Easthampton, Massachusetts. He graduated from Amherst College in 1877, where he was a member of Chi Phi fraternity. He attended law school at the University of [Maryland at Baltimore] and graduated in 1878. He was Admission to [the bar in the United States|admitted to the bar] in the latter year and commenced practice in Baltimore. He was also employed on the editorial staff of the Baltimore Herald and later with the Baltimore American. He was appointed as an examiner in equity by the supreme bench of Baltimore in December 1882.
Stockbridge was elected as a Republican to the 51st [United States Congress|Fifty-first] Congress, but declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1890. Afterwards, he served as United States commissioner of immigration for the port of Baltimore from 1891 to 1893.
He was a member of the General Society of Colonial Wars and served as the 14th President General of the National Society of Sons of [the American Revolution].
Stockbridge was elected judge of the supreme bench of Baltimore in November 1896 and served until 1911, and was a Regent of the University of Maryland from 1907 to 1920. He was appointed judge of the Maryland Court of Appeals on April 13, 1911, and was elected in November 1911 for a term of fifteen years. He died in Baltimore, and is interred in Loudon [Park National Cemetery].