Background Bullitt was born to Thomas Walker Bullitt and Annie P. Logan in
Louisville, Kentucky on March 4, 1873. His ancestors arrived in Kentucky in the 1700s: the Bullitts, the Walkers, the Christians (relatives of
Patrick Henry) and the Logans (descended from
United States Supreme Court Chief Justice
John Marshall). His father studied law in Philadelphia. {{cite book He began his collegiate career at
Princeton University, earning a bachelor's degree in 1894. He received a law degree from the
University of Louisville in 1895.
Early career That same year (1895), Bullitt entered law practice in his hometown of Louisville, where he established himself as a senior member of his firm Bullitt, Dawson & Tarrant. He practiced law there until his death in 1957.
Politics Bullitt served as a delegate-at-large at the
1908 Republican National Convention in Chicago. He made speeches on behalf of practically all Louisville Republicans during election time. If he did not think the election officers were performing up to his standards, he proceeded to have them arrested. Bulliit proved his dedication to President
William Howard Taft and the
Republican Party by leading Taft's election forces in Kentucky throughout his run for president in 1908.
Solicitor General (1912-1913) Taft appointed Bullitt Solicitor General on June 28, 1912. During his service (1912–1913), Bullitt argued cases involving enforcement of the
Sherman Anti-Trust Act on cotton corners, and publicity laws and mail rates regarding newspapers and their circulation. Other cases he argued in front of the U.S. Supreme Court involved income taxation of federal judicial salaries, taxation of
state bonds and municipal securities, the
Federal Farm Act, and the
Rehabilitation Act of California.
After government Bullitt was Kentucky's Republican nominee for Senate in 1914, but was defeated. For the remainder of his life, he was active not only as a lawyer but also as a banker, academic, and author. He taught at
Harvard University and served as a member of the committee on mathematics there. He became a Fellow of
Pierpont Morgan Library and was a member of the
Louisville Bar Association,
American Math Association,
Amateur Astronomy Association, and the
American Law Institute.
Carnegie Endowment and Alger Hiss In 1933, Bullitt joined the trustees of the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace after being nominated by his successor as solicitor general,
John W. Davis. Often critical of Carnegie, he was one of the most vociferous regarding
Alger Hiss, first because of the irregular procedure in accepting Hiss and president and then after following
HUAC hearings in August 1948. During late November and early December 1948, he wrote a "Factual Review of the
Whittaker Chambers-Alger Hiss Controversy," which he soon after had published. With this review, he voted on December 13, 1948, that the trustees accept Hiss's resignation as president but accepted the board's majority vote for leave of absence without pay. Bullitt then attended both trials of Hiss during 1949 and provided Federal prosecutor
Thomas Murphy with his review as a legal aid. ==Personal life==