Garside was born in
Middletown, Connecticut and his studies at
Cornell University were interrupted by America's entry into
World War I. He served as a private in the
United States Marine Corps. Garside earned a bachelor's degree in history and politics at
Princeton University before attending
Cornell Law School, from which he graduated in 1923. He was admitted to the New York State bar and practiced law at Choate, Larocque, and Mitchell, making partner in 1927. He was an active
Young Republican, serving as vice president of
The New York Young Republican Club. In 1934,
Fiorello H. La Guardia appointed him to a vacant Municipal Court justiceship, a position to which he was subsequently elected and served for ten years, though he resigned after two years to become a partner in his own law firm. He also became a director of the
Harsco Corporation. He served as a colonel in the Army's
General Staff Corps in
World War II and the Joint Army Navy Board for Training Unit Contracts. After the war, he returned to private practice and ran for office against
Charles A. Buckley in 1946. In 1947,
Thomas E. Dewey tapped him to head the State Commission against Discrimination. He also headed the committee on medical education centers which eventually drove the creation of the
Downstate and
Upstate Medical Centers. He also helped mediate a violent strike at
Bell Aircraft in
Buffalo, New York in 1949. Garside was a member of the State University board of trustees when he was tapped to assume the presidency of the SUNY System upon the resignation of his predecessor. At the time, Garside was serving as President of the Associated Hospital Service of New York, which later became New York
Blue Cross/Blue Shield, a position he kept and served in until his retirement in 1959. ==See also==