Background
Seymour was born on January 4, 1901, in Chicago, the son of Charles Walton Seymour and Margaret Lucinda Rugg.
Seymour was born on January 4, 1901, in Chicago, the son of Charles Walton Seymour and Margaret Lucinda Rugg.
University of Wisconsin–Madison. Columbia Law School.
He was an assistant solicitor general in the Justice Department from 1931 to 1933 before returning to Simpson Thacher & Bartlett. Seymour also taught law at New York University and Yale Law School, served as president of the American Arbitration Association and was chairman of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and of Freedom House. He served as president of the Legal Aid Society, the New York City Bar Association, and the American College of Trial Lawyers.
Seymour completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Wisconsin and later attended Columbia Law School from which he received his law degree in 1923.
In his practice, he specialized in trial work and appellate litigation. He argued many cases before the United States Supreme Court.
Seymour was considered an expert on antitrust law and civil liberties. He died in New York City on May 21, 1983.