Nathan Lewis Miller (10 October 1868 – 26 June 1953) was an American attorney and politician from New York. A Republican, he served as New York State Comptroller from 1901 to 1903, and a judge of the New York Supreme Court and New York Court of Appeals from 1903 to 1915. From 1921 to 1922, he served as governor of New York.
A native of Solon, New York. Miller graduated from the Cortland Normal School in 1887, taught school for several years while studying law with a Cortland attorney and attained admission to the bar in 1893. He also became active in politics when he began giving campaign speeches on behalf of Cortland County's Republican Committee.
Miller served as a school commissioner in Cortland County from 1894 to 1900 and was the city of Cortland's corporation counsel from 1901 to 1902. In 1901 he was appointed New York State Comptroller following the resignation of the incumbent, and he served until 1903. In 1903, he was appointed a justice of the New York Supreme Court, and in 1905 he was designated to serve as a justice of the court's appellate division. In 1913, he was appointed to the New York Court of Appeals, where he served until 1915.
In August 1915, Miller resigned his judgeship to return to practicing law, and he established a practice in Syracuse. In 1920, he was the successful Republican nominee for governor, and he served one term, 1921 to 1922. Miller prioritized cost-cutting during his term, and enacted reforms including ending the monopoly caused by the state's selection of a single firm as its official printer. Miller was defeated for reelection in 1922. After leaving office, Miller practiced law in New York City with the firm that became Willkie Farr & Gallagher. In addition, he served as general counsel, a director, and a finance committee member of United States Steel. He died at The Pierre hotel in New York City on 26 June 1953 and was buried at Cortland Rural Cemetery.
Early life
Nathan Lewis Miller was born in Solon, New York on 10 October 1868, a son of farmer Samuel Miller and Almera (Russell) Miller. The Samuel Miller family moved to a farm near Groton in 1872 and then to one near Cortland in 1881. He then attended the Cortland Normal School, from which he graduated in 1887. While attending the normal school, Miller joined the Gamma Sigma fraternity. After completing his education, Miller taught school in towns near Cortland from 1887 to 1893. Governor Benjamin B. Odell appointed Miller to fill the vacancy.
Miller left the state comptroller's post when Odell selected him to serve as a justice of the New York Supreme Court's sixth district, which included Cortland County. He was a delegate to the 1920 Republican National Convention, where he made the nominating speech for Herbert Hoover.
Governor
Despite his demurrals, state Republican leaders continued to promote Miller's candidacy for governor in the 1920 election. Other prospective candidates, including Charles F. Thompson and Francis Hugo, opposed Miller as being too closely aligned with corporate interests and the party's leadership. Miller agreed to accept the nomination and was the choice of the delegates at the party's July convention. Thompson and Miller then competed in the state's September primary election; Miller won the gubernatorial nomination with 65 percent of the vote, though Thompson remained on the ballot as the nominee of the Prohibition Party. In the November general election, Miller defeated incumbent Al Smith in that year's Republican wave, receiving 47 percent of the vote to Smith's 44.
Miller had argued against Prohibition as a federal encroachment on state power, but once the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was enacted, he supported enforcement on the grounds that obeying the law, even an unpopular one, took priority.
