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Office of the Attorney General

Attorneys General of the U.S., 1789 - Present
WILLIAM DEWITT MITCHELL
Fifty-Fourth Attorney General 1929-1933

Potrait of William Mitchell
Artist: John C.  Johansen (1876-1964)
MITCHELL was born in Winona, Minnesota, on September 9, 1874. He received his A.B. from the University of Minnesota in 1895, his LL.B. from that institution in 1896, and was admitted to the Minnesota bar. He began practicing law in St. Paul. Mitchell served as an infantry officer during the Spanish American War and World War I. On June 4, 1925, he was appointed Solicitor General of the United States. President Hoover appointed him Attorney General of the United States on March 4, 1929, and he held that office until March 4, 1933. Mitchell returned to New York City to practice law. He was named chairman of the Committee on Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and chief counsel of the joint congressional committee investigating the Pearl Harbor disaster. He died on August 24, 1955, in Syosset, New York.

About the Artist: John C.  Johansen (1876-1964)

Born in Copenhagen, Denmark, Johansen was brought to America in infancy. He studied under Frank Duveneck at the Chicago Art Institute. During World War I he was commissioned to portray Allied leaders Ferdinand Foch, Georges Clemenceau, Herbert Hoover and Woodrow Wilson. He also painted Daniel Chester French, Secretary of State Elihu Root, Henry Frick and Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen. His works are exhibited in New York, Washington, D. C., and Chicago. The Mitchell portrait was painted in 1935.




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