After his retirement from the Administrative Office, Chandler was tapped in 1957 by the territorial government of Hawaii to undertake a study of the administration of territorial courts, and to recommend legislation to implement his findings.[5] His recommendations were adopted with minor changes, and became the law of the state when Hawaii was admitted to the Union in 1959.[5] The Supreme Court of Illinois appointed Chandler to serve as the first court administrator for the state of Illinois. He stepped down from that position in September 1960.[5]
Personal life
Chandler's first wife was Helen Firman Mack, whom he married in 1906.[1] Helen died in 1930, and Chandler remarried in 1931, to Olive Hull.[1] He had one daughter, Margaret Mack Chandler, with his first wife.[1]
——— (October 1951). "Latter-Day Procedures in the Sentencing and Treatment of Offenders in the Federal Courts". Virginia Law Review. 37 (6): 825–846. doi:10.2307/1069323. JSTOR1069323.
^ abcde"Editor to Readers". American Bar Association Journal. 42. American Bar Association: 1145. December 1956. Retrieved February 1, 2013.
^ ab"Henry P. Chandler, First A.O Director, Dies at 95". The Third Branch. 8 (1). January 1976.
^ abcChandler, Henry P. (March 1960). "The Problem of Congestion and Delay in the Federal Courts". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 328: 144–152. doi:10.1177/000271626032800117. JSTOR1032730. S2CID154630321.