Background
Alfred Bennett was born in Dubuque, Iowa on June 10, 1854.
Alfred Bennett was born in Dubuque, Iowa on June 10, 1854.
He was the 49th Associate Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court, serving from 1919 to 1920. Previously he had served as a state circuit court judge and as a county school superintendent. An Iowa native, he practiced law in The Dalles, Oregon, with several cases making it to the Supreme Court of the United States.
By 1870 Alfred set off on his own and eventually ended up in The Dalles, Oregon where he taught and learned the law between 1873 and 1880.
In 1880, he passed the bar, this was while serving as Wasco County superintendent of schools from 1878 until 1882. In September 1882 Alfred Bennett was appointed as judge of the 8th judicial district which covered Eastern Oregon and remained in that post for two years.
He replaced Conrad P. Olson who was serving out the remainder of Frank A. Moore’s term after Moore died in office. Alfred Bennett then resigned from the court on October 5, 1920.
He then resumed private practice in The Dalles before dying on November 28, 1925.
While in private practice Bennett argued several cases in front of the Supreme Court of the United States. In 1896 Bennett represented Jane Skottowe in Oregon South. L. & U. North. R. Company v. Skottowe in a personal injury lawsuit.
In 1912, he represented Hamilton H. Hendricks against the government on charges of perjury in Hendricks v.
United States.
Alfred and his family lived in the Victorian house now known as Bennett–Williams House in The Dalles.