Robert Lee Tudor (March 11, 1874 – May 14, 1949) was an American politician from New York.
[3] After finishing public school, Tudor began working for the Southern Railroad as a telegrapher and station agent.
He served in the Assembly in 1913[4] (when he introduced and passed several important bills, including the "Tudor Bill" that required a prospective female employee whose employer required her to undergo a physical examination to be examined by a female physician, a "Dentistry Bill" that remedied abuses caused by irresponsible and unregistered people who concealed their identity under a corporation or trade name, and the "Juvenile Delinquency Measure), 1914,[5] 1915,[6] 1916,[7] and 1917.
Cruise was ultimately judged the duly elected City Clerk, and Tudor resigned from the office in January 1939.
[3] Tudor died from a subdural hematoma at Jefferson Hospital in Roanoke, Virginia, on May 14, 1949.