Earl Warren was a man that served in the United States Army in World War l. He was born on March 19, 1891 in Los Angeles, California. After living for 83 years, he died on July 9, 1974 in Washington D.C.. Warren suffered from congestive heart failure and of heart problems which caused his death that year. Warren went to his town’s public school in Bakersfield, California. He was a pretty smart person that did very well in the public school as well as when he attended the University of California, Berkeley. At the University of California, he was able to do his undergraduate and law degrees three years before entering the UCB’s School of Law. At the age of 23, Earl Warren, was was able to serve in the United States Army during World War l. However, he was not only …show more content…
When he was the attorney, he advocated the detention of Japanese Americans during World War ll. Unfortunately, he regretted something he did during the World War ll. Warren helped to come up with a plan that would remove people of the Japanese heritage from their homes or shelters to place them in the internment camps. Earl Warren might have helped with the situation of the internment camps but he was not always the bad guy because he became one of the most liked people in California. In 1942, he became the 30th governor that helped in reducing all taxes, increasing local spending on higher education and care for elderly. He was well liked that he was later nominated by president Dwight D. Eisenhower to be the leading judge of the Supreme Court or the 14th Chief Justice of the United States. He was a Republican Party’s nominee for vice-president but he lost. In 1966, Warren had to deal with Supreme Court cases called Miranda V. Arizona, Watkins V. United States, Reynolds V. Sims, and Baker V. Carr. He never became a president nor a vice president but he made it to the nomination and worked extremely hard to accomplish all his goals as a Chief