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11 am. Wednesday at
Immanuel Episcopal Church in Glencoe. Mr. Turnbull, who was 75, died
Saturday after a heart attack at his home, Black Acre, on Belfast road
in Sparks. He just had returned from a two month trip to Florida.
He was named to the
bench in 1960 by Governor J. Millard Tawes after serving as Baltimore
county state’s attorney and as a member of both the House of Delegates
and the state Senate.
During his career, the
judge was involved in a number of controversial cases and once made news
by refusing to hear cases presented by a bearded, long-haired assistant
state’s attorney.
Mr. Turnbull
steadfastly refused to comment on newspaper articles, once telling a
reporter that “one of the Immutable laws of the universe was that
“Turnbull does not comment on newspapers.”
When he retired in 1976
Mr. Turnbull was described by Judge John E. Raine, Jr., then chief judge
of the county Circuit Court, as “hardworking, certainly controversial on
occasion, but a great man.”
Another admirer spoke
of his forthrightness, saying, “No one ever had to question where Judge
Turnbull stood.”
Before becoming a
jurist, Mr. Turnbull served as Democratic floor leader and chairman of
the Finance Committee in the Senate. He and his counterpart In the House
of Delegates, A. Gordon Boone, who also was a law partner of Mr.
Turnbull’s, achieved a reputation for restricting the spending of the
Republican administration of Governor Theodore H. McKeldin.
Mr. Turnbull was born
In Towson and lived in the county for all of his life except for a short
period as a young man.
A 1925 graduate of
McDonogh School, he attended the Johns Hopkins University before
graduating from the University of Maryland law school in 1932.
From 1928 to 1932 be
served as bailiff to Samuel K. Dennis, chief judge of the city’s Supreme
Bench.
When he retired, he
credited Judge Dennis with filling him with the spirit of public
service. “He taught me that a public servant must be courageous and do
as he thinks right despite criticisms and ‘the slings and arrows’
directed at him,” Mr. Turnbull said. |
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In 1932 he began
practicing law in Towson, and he served as deputy state’s attorney from
1939 until 1943.
In 1943 he became a
member of the House of Delegates, only to resign to serve in the Army
during World War II. He entered the service as a private but achieved
the rank of captain in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps by the time he
left in 1946.
After returning to
Towson, Mr. Turnbull was elected state’s attorney and kept the post for
two years until he was appointed to fill a vacancy in the state Senate.
He served in the Senate until 1958, when he declined to run for another
term.
After the war he also
became a partner in the Towson law firm of Turnbull, Brewster, Boone,
Maguire and Brennan. In addition to Mr. Turnbull and Mr. Boone, all of
the partners were active in Democratic politics.
In 1956 Mr. Turnbull
managed Adlai E. Stevenson’s presidential campaign in Maryland.
Judge Turnbull also
served on the vestry of Immanuel Episcopal Church.
In 1942 he married the
former Esther E. DeArman, who died in 1974.
Mr. Turnbull is
survived by his wife, the former Mary Katherine Hance, whom he married
in 1977; a son, John Grason Turnbull II, of Sparks; a sister, Ellen T
Lynch of Sparks, and two grandchildren.
Editor’s note:
John Grason Turnbull II is currently the Circuit Administrative Judge
for the Circuit Court of Baltimore County. Following the family
tradition, his son, John Grason Turnbull III and his daughter, Katherine
Turnbull Sampson are both practicing law in Towson.
It is also noted
that John Grason Turnbull’s mother, Elizabeth Risteau Grason, is a
direct descendant of William Grason, who was the first popularly elected
governor of Maryland in 1838. |