William Hayes Pope
William Hayes Pope was the last Chief Justice of New Mexico Territory and the first United States district judge of the United States [District Court for the District of New Mexico] after New Mexico attained statehood.
Education and career
Pope was born in Beaufort, South Carolina to Joseph James Pope, a lawyer, and Emily Hayes. He received a Master of Arts degree from the University of Georgia in 1889, followed by a Bachelor of Laws from the Georgia School of Law">Georgia (U.S. state)">Georgia School of Law in 1890. He also taught at the University of Georgia as an adjunct professor of ancient languages from 1889 to 1890, when he was admitted to the bar. He then practiced law in Atlanta, Georgia., joining the law firm of his uncle, Hoke Smith.Pope moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico Territory in 1894, apparently seeking a climate that was better for his health. He practiced law there until 1896 in the firm Victory & Pope, with senior partner John P. Victory. Their partnership was also a public one; Victory was then the territory's attorney general, and Pope served as the Assistant Attorney General from 1895 to 1897. During that period, he served as a commissioner from New Mexico to the Atlanta Exposition in 1895, and on the Capitol Rebuilding Commission from 1895 to 1900.
In March 1896, Pope was appointed by the United States Attorney General to serve as a special Assistant [United States Attorney] in the United States Court of Private Land Claims, from which Pope resigned in June 1902. He was then appointed by the United States Secretary of the Interior as a special United States Attorney to represent the interests of the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico Territory, from 1901 to 1902.
In June 1902, Governor-General of the Philippines William Howard Taft appointed Pope to a judgeship on the Court of First Instance, Philippine Islands. Pope established a friendship with Taft during his service there. He returned to the United States in July 1903, and in October was appointed by President Theodore Roosevelt as an associate justice of the New Mexico Territorial Supreme Court. Pope was elevated to Chief Justice in 1910, and served in that capacity until 1912.