| bloomfield profile
Nathaniel
H. Bloomfield
Born in Bowling Green,
Kentucky on November 21, 1850. Nathaniel Bloomfield was educated
at Washington University, in St. Louis.
In May of 1870 he accompanied
his parents to Washington Territory, and by 1871 he had begun studing
law. Bloomfield was admitted to the bar in 1873 and began his practice
in Kalama.
In 1874 Nathaniel Bloomfield
was the Republican nominee for district attorney of the Second Judicial
district of Washington Territory; he lost the election by 137 votes.
In 1876 he defeated Democratic opponent Judge Columbia Lancaster,
who was a welll known Vancouver attorney.
In 1882 Bloomfield resumed
the practice of law in Vancouver, and when Washington became a state
in 1889, he was the first judge elected to the superior court for
Clarke County, containing Pacific, Wahikiakum, Cowlitz, Clarke and
Skamania Counties. He defeated Democratic opponent J.A. Munday and
former Chief Justice B.F. Dennison of the Independent party. The
Vancouver Independent newspaper of October 30, 1889, showed Bloomfield
receiving 2,366 votes to Munday's 1,452, and Dennison with 240.
After one term on the bench, Judge Bloomfield returned to private
practice.
During Judge Bloomfield's
career the Clark county courthouse burned to the ground on February
24, 1890. All the court records and land ownership records were
lost, resulting in litigation over titles to real estate which lasted
for years.
Judge Bloomfield died
on September 7, 1922.
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