John H. Campbell

John Henry Campbell (September 19, 1868 – June 10, 1928) was an American jurist who served as an associate justice of the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court from 1905 until 1912.

[2] The union produced four children: William, Helen, Ruth[4] and John Jr. Moving to Arizona Territory in 1901, Campbell formed a partnership with Roscoe Dale based in Tucson.

[5] Congressional approval for a new judge on the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court came at the beginning of March.

[6] President Theodore Roosevelt nominated Campbell to be an associate justice of the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court on March 15, 1905.

[13] In other matters, Campbell sided with the territorial medical board in Aiton v. The Board of Medical Examiners, 13 Arizona 354 (1911) when the doctor claimed his "mineral waters and preparations" had medicinal benefit in the treatment of "incipient tuberculosis, system catarrh, and catarrh of the head, Bright's disease, diabetes, rheumatism, and numerous other diseases".

[12] The justice found the territorial laws allowed a referendum on the prohibition of alcohol to be placed before the voters in Thalheimer v. Board of Supervisors of Maricopa County, 11 Arizona 430 (1908).

Campbell also wrote opinion in Tribolet v. The United States, 11 Arizona 435 (1908), the only antitrust case to come before the territorial court.

[12] Arizona gaining statehood on February 14, 1912, marked the end of Campbell's time on the territorial bench.