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Administrative History

Nathan Lewis Miller was born in Solon, New York on October 10, 1868. Trained as a lawyer, he served in local government and was active in the Republican Party in Cortland County before serving as state comptroller from 1901 to 1903. Miller was subsequently appointed to fill a vacancy in the state supreme court, where he served until assuming a seat on the state Court of Appeals in 1913. After two years on the state's highest court, Miller resigned and returned to the practice of law in Syracuse. In 1920, he received the Republican gubernatorial nomination and successfully unseated Governor Alfred E. Smith. After Smith defeated him to reclaim the governorship in 1922, Miller retired from politics and returned once again to his legal career, including service as general counsel for the United States Steel Corporation. Nathan Miller died on June 26, 1953 at the age of eighty-four.

Highly respected as an attorney, Miller was known for fiscal conservatism in politics. While governor, he pursued the reorganization of state government, but approached the process in piecemeal fashion as opposed to the broader restructuring proposed by Governor Smith. In 1921, on Miller's recommendation, the Department of Labor was reorganized. The Industrial Commission was replaced with a single industrial commissioner and a three-member Industrial Board was created to issue, amend, and interpret the state Industrial Code Rules and to review and determine claims in workers' compensation cases. Also during Miller's administration, the two state public service districts were abolished and replaced by a single Public Service Commission with statewide authority over all public utilities except rapid transit in New York City, which was placed under a new Transit Commission.

Miller supported the recommendations of the Joint Legislative Committee to Investigate Seditious Activities (Lusk Committee) for curbing the spread of radical thought, signing into law a package of legislation previously vetoed by Governor Smith. Miller also supported the creation of the Motion Picture Commission (later replaced by the Motion Picture Division within the Education Department) to review the moral character of motion pictures prior to licensing for exhibition in the state. Lastly, Miller actively advocated the establishment of the Water Power Commission, which was directed to investigate the state's developed and undeveloped water power resources. The commission was empowered to issue licenses to private entities authorizing the diversion of state waters for power development or other purposes.

For further information regarding the life and political career of Nathan Miller, see "Miller, Nathan L." In Biographical Directory of the Governors of the United States, 1789-1978, vol. 3, ed. Robert Sobel and John Raimo, 1100. Westport, Ct.: Meckler Books, 1978; and Case, Dick. "Miller, Nathan L(ewis)." In The Encyclopedia of New York State, ed. Peter Eisenstadt, 985-986. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2005.