Background
Lewis was born in Paterson, New Jersey in 1869 to Isaac Arriston and Hanna (Davies) Lewis.
Lewis was born in Paterson, New Jersey in 1869 to Isaac Arriston and Hanna (Davies) Lewis.
He attended local schools in Paterson. As was the custom of the time, he studied law with private tutors (read the law) and was admitted to the bar in 1892.
He was the Republican nominee for Governor of New Jersey in 1910 against Woodrow Wilson and lost the election. During this time he also wrote for New York newspapers. Lewis joined the Republican Party and became politically active.
In 1897 he was elected as a Republican to the New Jersey General Assembly.
He was re-elected in 1899 and 1900, serving as majority leader in the Assembly during his last term. In 1904 Lewis was elected City Counsel of Paterson.
He resigned this position when Governor Franklin Murphy appointed him Clerk in Chancery (an office now known as Clerk of the Superior Court). Lewis filled the vacancy left by Edward C. Stokes, who resigned upon his inauguration as Governor.
He was renominated by Stokes for a full term in 1905.
Lewis left the position of Clerk in Chancery in 1909 when he was appointed by Governor John Franklin Fort to be the State Commissioner of Banking and Insurance. In 1910 Lewis was nominated to be the Republican candidate for Governor of New Jersey, facing off against Democrat Woodrow Wilson, then President of Princeton University. Lewis did not articulate an appealing campaign.
Wilson soundly defeated Lewis in the general election by a margin of more than 49,000 votes.
But Republican William Howard Taft had carried New Jersey in the 1908 presidential election by more than 80,000 votes. Some historians think that Wilson benefited from former president Theodore Roosevelt"s public campaign for progressive causes in this period.
In 1912 Lewis resigned from his position as Banking Commissioner to accept the judicial position of Vice Chancellorship from Chancellor Edwin Robert Walker. He was reappointed to this office in 1919, 1926, 1933 and 1940.
He retired in 1947, when the powers of the Chancellor and Vice Chancellors were absorbed by the Superior Court under the new State Constitution.
Wilson ran a spirited campaign declaring his independence from machine politics, promising that party bosses would not control the state if he was elected.