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Charles Evans Hughes

Charles Evans Hughes Sr. (April 11, 1862 – August 27, 1948) was an American statesman, politician, academic, and jurist who served as the 11th chief justice of the United States from 1930 to 1941. A member of the Republican Party, he previously was the 36th governor of New York (1907–1910), an associate justice of the Supreme Court (1910–1916), and 44th U.S. secretary of state (1921–1925). As the Republican nominee in the 1916 presidential election, he lost narrowly to Woodrow Wilson.

Charles Evans Hughes
Hughes in 1931
11th Chief Justice of the United States
In office
February 24, 1930 – June 30, 1941[1]
Nominated byHerbert Hoover
Preceded byWilliam Howard Taft
Succeeded byHarlan F. Stone
Judge of the Permanent Court of International Justice
In office
September 8, 1928 – February 15, 1930
Preceded byJohn Bassett Moore
Succeeded byFrank B. Kellogg
44th United States Secretary of State
In office
March 5, 1921 – March 4, 1925
President
Preceded byBainbridge Colby
Succeeded byFrank B. Kellogg
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
In office
October 10, 1910 – June 10, 1916[1]
Nominated byWilliam Howard Taft
Preceded byDavid Josiah Brewer
Succeeded byJohn Hessin Clarke
36th Governor of New York
In office
January 1, 1907 – October 6, 1910
Lieutenant
Preceded byFrank W. Higgins
Succeeded byHorace White
Personal details
Born(1862-04-11)April 11, 1862
Glens Falls, New York, U.S.
DiedAugust 27, 1948(1948-08-27) (aged 86)
Osterville, Massachusetts, U.S.
Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Antoinette Carter
(m. 1888; died 1945)
Children4, including Charles and Elizabeth
Education
Signature

Born to a Welsh immigrant preacher and his wife in Glens Falls, New York, Hughes graduated from Brown University and Columbia Law School and practiced law in New York City. After working in private practice for several years, in 1905 he led successful state investigations into public utilities and the life insurance industry. He won election as the governor of New York in 1906, and implemented several progressive reforms. In 1910, President William Howard Taft appointed Hughes as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. During his tenure on the Supreme Court, Hughes often joined Associate Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. in voting to uphold state and federal regulations.

Hughes served as an associate justice until 1916, when he resigned from the bench to accept the Republican presidential nomination. Though Hughes was widely viewed as the favorite in the race against incumbent Democratic President Woodrow Wilson, Wilson won a narrow victory. After Warren G. Harding won the 1920 presidential election, Hughes accepted Harding's invitation to serve as secretary of state. Serving under Harding and Calvin Coolidge, he negotiated the Washington Naval Treaty, which was designed to prevent a naval arms race among the United States, the United Kingdom and Japan. Hughes left office in 1925 and returned to private practice, becoming one of the most prominent attorneys in the country.

In 1930, President Herbert Hoover appointed him to succeed Chief Justice Taft. Along with Associate Justice Owen Roberts, Hughes emerged as a key swing vote on the bench, positioned between the liberal Three Musketeers and the conservative Four Horsemen. The Hughes Court struck down several New Deal programs in the early and the mid-1930s, but 1937 marked a turning point for the Supreme Court and the New Deal as Hughes and Roberts joined with the Three Musketeers to uphold the Wagner Act and a state minimum wage law. That same year saw the defeat of the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937, which would have expanded the size of the Supreme Court. Hughes served until 1941, when he retired and was succeeded by Associate Justice Harlan F. Stone.

Early life and family edit

 
Hughes at the age of 16

Hughes's father, David Charles Hughes, immigrated to the United States from Wales in 1855 after he was inspired by The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin. David became a Baptist preacher in Glens Falls, New York, and married Mary Catherine Connelly, whose family had been in the United States for several generations.[2] Charles Evans Hughes, the only child of David and Mary, was born in Glens Falls on April 11, 1862.[3][4] The Hughes family moved to Oswego, New York, in 1866, but relocated soon after to Newark, New Jersey, and then to Brooklyn. With the exception of a brief period of attendance at Newark High School, Hughes received no formal education until 1874, instead being educated by his parents. In September 1874, he enrolled in New York City's prestigious Public School 35, graduating the following year.[5]

At the age of 14, Hughes attended Madison University (now Colgate University) for two years before transferring to Brown University. He graduated from Brown third in his class at the age of 19, having been elected to Phi Beta Kappa in his junior year. He was also a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity, where he served as the first international President later on.[6] During his time at Brown, Hughes volunteered for the successful presidential campaign of Republican nominee James A. Garfield in the 1880 presidential election, a fraternity brother of his in Delta Upsilon where Garfield was an undergraduate at Williams College, and served as the editor of the college newspaper. After graduating from Brown, Hughes spent a year working as a teacher in Delhi, New York.[7] He next enrolled in Columbia Law School, where he graduated first in his class in 1884.[6] That same year, he passed the New York bar exam with the highest score ever awarded by the state.[8]

In 1888, Hughes married Antoinette Carter, the daughter of the senior partner of the law firm where he worked. Their first child, Charles Evans Hughes Jr., was born the following year, and Hughes purchased a house in Manhattan's Upper West Side neighborhood.[9] Hughes and his wife had one son and three daughters.[10] Their youngest child, Elizabeth Hughes, was one of the first humans injected with insulin, and later served as president of the Supreme Court Historical Society.[11]

Legal and academic career edit

 
Hughes with his wife and children, c. 1916

Hughes took a position with the Wall Street law firm of Chamberlain, Carter & Hornblower in 1883, focusing primarily on matters related to contracts and bankruptcies. He was made a partner in the firm in 1888, and the firm changed its name to Carter, Hughes & Cravath (it later became known as Hughes Hubbard & Reed). Hughes left the firm and became a professor at Cornell Law School from 1891 to 1893. He returned to Carter, Hughes & Cravath in 1893.[12] He also joined the board of Brown University and served on a special committee that recommended revisions to New York's Code of Civil Procedure.[13]

Exposing corrupt utilities edit

Responding to newspaper stories run by the New York World, Governor Frank W. Higgins appointed a legislative committee to investigate the state's public utilities in 1905. On the recommendation of a former state judge who had been impressed by Hughes's performance in court, the legislative committee appointed Hughes to lead the investigation. Hughes was reluctant to take on the powerful utility companies, but Senator Frederick C. Stevens, the leader of the committee, convinced Hughes to accept the position. Hughes decided to center his investigation on Consolidated Gas, which controlled the production and sale of gas in New York City.[14] Though few expected the committee to have any impact on public corruption, Hughes was able to show that Consolidated Gas had engaged in a pattern of tax evasion and fraudulent bookkeeping. To eliminate or mitigate those abuses, Hughes drafted and convinced the state legislature to pass bills that established a commission to regulate public utilities and lowered gas prices.[15]

Exposing corrupt insurance companies edit

Hughes's success made him a popular public figure in New York, and he was appointed counsel to the Armstrong Insurance Commission, which investigated the major life insurance companies headquartered in New York.[16] His examination of the insurance industry uncovered payments made to journalists and lobbyists as well as payments and other forms of compensation directed to legislators serving throughout the country. His investigation also showed that many top insurance executives had various conflicts of interest and had received huge raises at the same time that dividends to policyholders had fallen. Seeking to remove Hughes from the investigation, Republican leaders nominated him as the party's candidate for Mayor of New York City, but Hughes refused the nomination. His efforts ultimately resulted in the resignation or firing of the most of the top-ranking officials in the three major life insurance companies in the United States.[17] Following the investigation, Hughes convinced the state legislature to bar insurance companies from owning corporate stock, underwriting securities, or engaging in other banking practices.[16]

Governor of New York edit

 
Gubernatorial portrait of Charles Evans Hughes

Seeking a strong candidate to defeat newspaper mogul William Randolph Hearst in the 1906 New York gubernatorial election, President Theodore Roosevelt convinced New York Republican leaders to nominate Hughes for governor. Roosevelt described Hughes as "a sane and sincere reformer, who really has fought against the very evils which Hearst denounces,... [but is] free from any taint of demagogy."[18] In his campaign for governor, Hughes attacked the corruption of specific companies but defended corporations as a necessary part of the economy. He also called for an eight-hour workday on public works projects and favored prohibitions on child labor.[19] Hughes was not a charismatic speaker, but he campaigned vigorously throughout the state and won the endorsements of most newspapers.[20] Ultimately, Hughes defeated Hearst in a close election, taking 52 percent of the vote.[19]

Reforming state government edit

Hughes's governorship focused largely on reforming the government and addressing political corruption. He expanded the number of civil service positions, increased the power of the public utility regulatory commissions, and won passage of laws that placed limits on political donations by corporations and required political candidates to track campaign receipts and expenditures.[21] He also signed laws that barred younger workers from several dangerous occupations and established a maximum 48-hour workweek for manufacturing workers under the age of 16. To enforce those laws, Hughes reorganized the New York State Department of Labor. Hughes's labor policies were influenced by economist Richard T. Ely, who sought to improve working conditions for laborers, but rejected the more far-reaching reforms favored by union leaders like Samuel Gompers.[22]

Organizing the Baptists edit

The busy governor found time to get involved in religious matters. A lifelong Northern Baptist, Hughes participated in the creation of the Northern Baptist Convention in May 1907. Hughes served the convention as its first president, beginning the task of unifying the thousands of independent Baptist churches across the North into one denomination. Previously, northern Baptists had only connected between local churches through mission societies and benevolent causes. The Northern Baptist Convention went on to become the historically important American Baptist Churches USA, which made this aspect of Hughes's life during his governorship a key part of his historical influence.[23][24]

Disappointing second term as governor edit

However, Hughes's political role was changing. He had previously been close with Roosevelt, but relations between Hughes and the president cooled after a dispute over a minor federal appointment.[25] Roosevelt chose not to seek re-election in 1908, instead endorsing Secretary of War William Howard Taft as his preferred successor. Taft won the Republican presidential nomination and asked Hughes to serve as his running mate, but Hughes declined the offer. Hughes also considered retiring from the governorship, but Taft and Roosevelt convinced him to seek a second term. Despite having little support among some of the more conservative leaders of the state party, Hughes won re-election in the 1908 election. Hughes's second term proved to be less successful than his first. His highest priority was a direct primary law, and it repeatedly failed to pass. He did obtain increased regulation over telephone and telegraph companies and won passage of the first workers' compensation bill in U.S. history.[26][27]

Associate Justice edit

 
Hughes struck up a close friendship with Associate Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

By early 1910, Hughes was anxious to retire from his position as governor.[28] A vacancy on the Supreme Court arose following the death of Associate Justice David J. Brewer, and Taft offered the position to Hughes, who quickly accepted the offer.[28] His nomination was formally received by the Senate on April 25, 1910. The Senate Judiciary Committee reported favorably on his nomination on May 2, 1910, and the Senate unanimously confirmed him the same day.[28] Two months after Hughes's confirmation, but prior to his taking the judicial oath, Chief Justice Melville W. Fuller died. Taft elevated Associate Justice Edward Douglass White to the position of Chief Justice despite having previously indicated to Hughes that he might select Hughes as Chief Justice. White's candidacy for the position was bolstered by his long experience on the bench and popularity among his fellow justices, as well as Theodore Roosevelt's coolness towards Hughes.[29]

Hughes was sworn in to the Supreme Court on October 10, 1910, and quickly struck up friendships with other members of the Court, including Chief Justice White, Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan, and Associate Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.[30] In the disposition of cases, however, Hughes tended to align with Holmes. He voted to uphold state laws providing for minimum wages, workmen's compensation, and maximum work hours for women and children.[31] He also wrote several opinions upholding the power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce under the Commerce Clause. His majority opinion in Baltimore & Ohio Railroad vs. Interstate Commerce Commission upheld the right of the federal government to regulate the hours of railroad workers.[32] His majority opinion in the 1914 Shreveport Rate Case upheld the Interstate Commerce Commission's decision to void discriminatory railroad rates imposed by the Railroad Commission of Texas. The decision established that the federal government could regulate intrastate commerce when it affected interstate commerce, though Hughes avoided directly overruling the 1895 case of United States v. E. C. Knight Co.[33]

He also wrote a series of opinions that upheld civil liberties; in one such case, McCabe v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., Hughes's majority opinion required railroad carriers to give African-Americans "equal treatment."[34] Hughes's majority opinion in Bailey v. Alabama invalidated a state law that had made it a crime for a laborer to fail to complete obligations agreed to in a labor contract. Hughes held that this law violated the Thirteenth Amendment and discriminated against African-American workers.[32] He also joined the majority decision in the 1915 case of Guinn v. United States, which outlawed the use of grandfather clauses to determine voter enfranchisement.[35] Hughes and Holmes were the only dissenters from the court's ruling that affirmed a lower court's decision to withhold a writ of habeas corpus from Leo Frank, a Jewish factory manager convicted of murder in the state of Georgia.[36]

Presidential candidate edit

 
Hughes in Winona, Minnesota, during the 1916 presidential campaign campaigning on the Olympian

Taft and Roosevelt endured a bitter split during Taft's presidency, and Roosevelt challenged Taft for the 1912 Republican presidential nomination. Taft won re-nomination, but Roosevelt ran on the ticket of a third party, the Progressive Party.[37] With the split in the Republican Party, Democratic Governor Woodrow Wilson defeated Taft and Roosevelt in the 1912 presidential election and enacted his progressive New Freedom agenda.[38] Seeking to bridge the divide in the Republican Party and limit Wilson to a single term, several Republican leaders asked Hughes to consider running in the 1916 presidential election. Hughes at first rebuffed those entreaties, but his potential candidacy became the subject of widespread speculation and polls showed that he was the preferred candidate of many Republican voters.

By the time of the June 1916 Republican National Convention, Hughes had won two presidential primaries, and his backers had lined up the support of numerous delegates. Hughes led on the first presidential ballot of the convention and clinched the nomination on the third ballot. Hughes accepted the nomination, becoming the first and only sitting Supreme Court Justice to serve as a major party's presidential nominee, and submitted his resignation to President Wilson. Roosevelt, meanwhile, declined to run again on a third party ticket, leaving Hughes and Wilson as the only major candidates in the race.[39]

 
1916 electoral vote results

Because of the Republican Party's dominance in presidential elections held since the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860, Hughes was widely regarded as the favorite even though Wilson was the incumbent. His candidacy was further boosted by his own reputation for intelligence, personal integrity, and moderation. Hughes also won the public support of both Taft and Roosevelt, though Roosevelt remained uneasy with Hughes, who he feared would be a "Wilson with whiskers." However, the 1912 split in Republican ranks remained a lingering issue, and Hughes damaged his campaign by deciding to base his California campaign with the conservative Republican regulars. Hiram Johnson, the Governor of California who had been Roosevelt's running mate in the 1912 election, endorsed Hughes but the Progressive forces ignored Hughes.[40] Nationally, because of Hughes's opposition to the Adamson Act and the Sixteenth Amendment, most former Progressive Party leaders endorsed Wilson.[41] By election day, Hughes was still generally considered to be the favorite. He performed strongly in the Northeast and early election returns looked good. Nevertheless, Woodrow Wilson, as expected, swept the Solid South while also winning several states in the Midwest and Great Plains, where his candidacy was boosted by a strong antiwar sentiment. Wilson ultimately prevailed after winning the decisive state of California by fewer than 4,000 votes.[42]

Return to law practice and political advising edit

After the election, Hughes turned down offers from larger organizations and returned to his small law firm, now known as Hughes, Rounds, Schurman & Dwight.[43] In March 1917, Hughes joined with many other Republican leaders in demanding that Wilson declare war on the Central Powers after Germany sank several American merchant ships. The next month, Wilson asked Congress for a declaration of war, and the United States entered World War I.[44] Hughes supported Wilson's military policies, including the imposition of the draft, and he served as chairman of New York City's draft appeals board. He also investigated the aircraft industry on behalf of the Wilson administration, exposing numerous inefficiencies.[45] He once again returned to private practice after the war, serving a wide array of clients, including five Socialists who had been expelled from the New York legislature for their political beliefs.[46] He sought to broker a compromise between President Wilson and Senate Republicans regarding US entrance into Wilson's proposed League of Nations, but the Senate rejected the League and the Treaty of Versailles.[47]

With Wilson's popularity declining, many Republican leaders believed that their party would win the 1920 presidential election. Hughes remained popular in the party, and many influential Republicans favored him as the party's candidate in 1920. Hughes was struck by personal tragedy when his daughter, Helen, died in 1920 of tuberculosis, and he refused to allow his name to be considered for the presidential nomination at the 1920 Republican National Convention. The party instead nominated a ticket consisting of Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio and Governor Calvin Coolidge of Massachusetts.[48] The Republican ticket won in a landslide, taking 61 percent of the popular vote.[49]

Secretary of State edit

 
Hughes's residence in 1921

Shortly after Harding's victory in the 1920 election, Hughes accepted the position of Secretary of State.[49] After the death of Chief Justice White in May 1921, Hughes was mentioned as a potential successor. Hughes told Harding he was uninterested in leaving the State Department, and Harding instead appointed former President Taft as the Chief Justice.[50]

Harding granted Hughes a great deal of discretion in his leadership of the State Department and US foreign policy.[51] Harding and Hughes frequently communicated, Hughes worked within some broad outlines, and the president remained well-informed. However, the President rarely overrode any of Hughes's decisions, with the big and obvious exception of the League of Nations.[52]

After taking office, President Harding hardened his stance on the League of Nations to deciding the US would not join even a scaled-down version.[53] Another view is that Harding favored joining with reservations when he assumed office on March 4, 1921, but Senators staunchly opposed (the "Irreconcilables"), per Ronald E. Powaski's 1991 book, "threatened to wreck the new administration."[54]

Hughes favored membership in the League. Early in his tenure as Secretary of State, he asked the Senate to vote on the Treaty of Versailles,[55] but he yielded to either Harding's changing views and/or the political reality within the Senate. Instead, he convinced Harding of the necessity of a separate treaty with Germany, resulting in the signing and eventual ratification of the U.S.–German Peace Treaty.[56] Hughes also favored US entrance into the Permanent Court of International Justice but was unable to convince the Senate to provide support.[57]

Washington Naval Treaty edit

Hughes's major initiative in office was preventing an arms race among the three great naval powers of Britain, Japan, and the United States. After Senator William Borah led passage of a resolution calling on the Harding administration to negotiate an arms reduction treaty with Japan and Britain, Hughes convinced those countries as well as Italy and France to attend a naval conference in Washington. Hughes selected an American delegation consisting of himself, former Secretary of State Elihu Root, Republican Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, and Democratic Senator Oscar Underwood. Hughes hoped that the selection of Underwood would ensure bipartisan support for any treaty arising from the conference.

Prior to the conference, Hughes had carefully considered possible treaty terms since each side would seek terms that would provide its respective navy with subtle advantages. He decided to propose an arms reduction formula based on the immediate halting of all naval construction, with future construction limits based on the ship tonnage of each country. The formula would be based on the ship tonnage ratio of 1920, which stood at roughly 5:5:3 for the United States, Britain, and Japan, respectively. Knowing that US and foreign naval leaders would resist his proposal, he anxiously guarded it from the press, but he won the support of Root, Lodge, and Underwood.[58]

The Washington Naval Conference opened in November 1921, attended by five national delegations, and in the gallery by hundreds of reporters and dignitaries such as Chief Justice Taft and William Jennings Bryan. On the first day of the conference, Hughes unveiled his proposal to limit naval armaments. Hughes's ambitious proposal to scrap all US capital ships under construction stunned the delegates, as did his proposals for the Japanese and British Navies.[59] The British delegation, led by Arthur Balfour, supported the proposal, but the Japanese delegation, under the leadership of Katō Tomosaburō, asked for several modifications. Katō asked for the ratio to be adjusted to 10:10:7 and refused to destroy the Mutsu, a dreadnought that many Japanese saw as a symbol of national pride. Katō eventually relented on the naval ratios, but Hughes acquiesced to the retention of the Mutsu, leading to protests from British leaders. Hughes clinched an agreement after convincing Balfour to agree to limit the size of the Admiral-class battlecruisers despite objections from the British Navy. Hughes also won agreement on the Four-Power Treaty, which called for a peaceful resolution of territorial claims in the Pacific Ocean, as well as the Nine-Power Treaty, which guaranteed the territorial integrity of China. News of the success of the conference was warmly received around the world. Franklin D. Roosevelt later wrote that the conference "brought to the world the first important voluntary agreement for limitation and reduction of armament."[60]

 
Hughes (fourth from right) leads a delegation to Brazil with Carl Theodore Vogelgesang in 1922

Other issues edit

In the aftermath of World War I, the German economy struggled from the strain of postwar rebuilding and war reparations owed to the Entente, and the Entente powers in turn owed large war debts to the United States. Though many economists favored cancellation of all European war debts, French leaders were unwilling to cancel the reparations, and Congress refused to consider forgiving the war debts. Hughes helped organize the creation of an international committee of economists to study the possibility of lowering Germany's reparations, and Hughes selected Charles G. Dawes to lead that committee. The resulting Dawes Plan, which provided for annual payments by Germany, was accepted at a 1924 conference held in London.[61]

 
Autochrome portrait by Georges Chevalier, 1924

Hughes favored a closer relationship with the United Kingdom, and sought to coordinate US foreign policy with Great Britain concerning matters in Europe and Asia.[62] Hughes sought better relations with the countries of Latin America, and he favored removing US troops when he believed that doing so was practicable. He formulated plans for the withdrawal of US soldiers from the Dominican Republic and Nicaragua but decided that instability in Haiti required the continued presence of US soldiers. He also settled a border dispute between Panama and Costa Rica by threatening to send soldiers into Panama.[63]

Hughes was the keynote speaker at the 1919 National Conference on Lynching.

Return to private practice edit

Hughes stayed on as Secretary of State in the Coolidge administration after the death of Harding in 1923, but he left office in early 1925.[64] He once again returned to his law firm, becoming one of the highest-earning lawyers in the country. He also served as a special master in a case concerning Chicago's sewage system, was elected president of the American Bar Association, and co-founded the National Conference on Christians and Jews.

State party leaders asked him to run against Al Smith in New York's 1926 gubernatorial election, and some national party leaders suggested that he run for president in 1928, but Hughes declined to seek public office. After the 1928 Republican National Convention nominated Herbert Hoover, Hughes gave Hoover his full support and campaigned for him across the United States. Hoover won the election in a landslide and asked Hughes to serve as his Secretary of State, but Hughes declined the offer to keep his commitment to serve as a judge on the Permanent Court of International Justice.[65]

Judge of the Permanent Court of International Justice edit

Hughes served on the Permanent Court of International Justice from 1928 until 1930.[66]

Chief Justice edit

Rejoining the Supreme Court edit

 
Time cover, December 29, 1924

On February 3, 1930, President Hoover nominated Hughes to succeed Chief Justice Taft, who was gravely ill. Though many had expected Hoover to elevate his close friend, Associate Justice Harlan Stone, Hughes was the top choice of Taft and Attorney General William D. Mitchell.[67][68] Though Hughes had compiled a progressive record during his tenure as an Associate Justice, by 1930 Taft believed that Hughes would be a consistent conservative on the court.[69] The nomination faced resistance from progressive Republicans such as senators George W. Norris and William E. Borah, who were concerned that Hughes would be overly friendly to big business after working as a corporate lawyer.[70][71] Many of those progressives, as well some Southern states' rights advocates, were outraged by the Taft Court's tendency to strike down state and federal legislation on the basis of the doctrine of substantive due process and feared that a Hughes Court would emulate the Taft Court.[72] Adherents of the substantive due process doctrine held that economic regulations such as restrictions on child labor and minimum wages violated freedom of contract, which, they argued, could not be abridged by federal and state laws because of the Fifth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment.[73]

The Senate Judiciary Committee held no hearings, and voted to favorably report on Hughes's nomination by a 10–2 vote on February 10, 1930.[74] On February 13, 1930, the Senate voted 31–49 against sending his nomination back to committee.[74][75] After a brief but bitter confirmation battle, Hughes was confirmed by the Senate on February 13, 1930, in a 52–26 vote,[74][76] and he took his judicial oath of office on February 24, 1930.[1] Hughes's son, Charles Jr., was subsequently forced to resign as Solicitor General after his father took office as Chief Justice.[77] Hughes quickly emerged as a leader of the Court, earning the admiration of his fellow justices for his intelligence, energy, and strong understanding of the law.[78] Shortly after Hughes was confirmed, Hoover nominated federal judge John J. Parker to succeed deceased Associate Justice Edward Terry Sanford. The Senate rejected Parker, whose earlier rulings had alienated labor unions and the NAACP, but confirmed Hoover's second nominee, Owen Roberts.[79] In early 1932, the other justices asked Hughes to request the resignation of Oliver Wendell Holmes, whose health had declined as he entered his nineties. Hughes privately asked his old friend to retire, and Holmes immediately sent a letter of resignation to President Hoover. To replace Holmes, Hoover nominated Benjamin N. Cardozo, who quickly won confirmation.[80]

The early Hughes Court was divided between the conservative "Four Horsemen" and the liberal "Three Musketeers".[a][82] The primary difference between these two blocs was that the Four Horsemen embraced the substantive due process doctrine, but the liberals, including Louis Brandeis, advocated for judicial restraint, or deference to legislative bodies.[83] Hughes and Roberts were the swing justices between the two blocs for much of the 1930s.[84]

 
Antoinette Carter Hughes

In one of the first major cases of his tenure, Hughes joined with Roberts and the Three Musketeers to strike down a piece of state legislation in the 1931 landmark case of Near v. Minnesota. In his majority opinion, Hughes held that the First Amendment barred states from violating freedom of the press. Hughes also wrote the majority opinion in Stromberg v. California, which represented the first time the Supreme Court struck down a state law on the basis of the incorporation of the Bill of Rights.[b][82] In another early case, O'Gorman & Young, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Insurance Co., Hughes and Roberts joined with the liberal bloc in upholding a state regulation that limited commissions for the sale of fire insurance.[85]

Roosevelt takes office edit

During Hoover's presidency, the country plunged into the Great Depression.[86] As the country faced an ongoing economic calamity, Franklin D. Roosevelt decisively defeated Hoover in the 1932 presidential election.[87] Responding to the Great Depression, Roosevelt passed a bevy of domestic legislation as part of his New Deal domestic program, and the response to the New Deal became one of the key issues facing the Hughes Court. In the Gold Clause Cases, a series of cases that presented some of the first major tests of New Deal laws, the Hughes Court upheld the voiding of the "gold clauses" in private and public contracts that was favored by the Roosevelt administration.[88] Roosevelt, who had expected the Supreme Court to rule adversely to his administration's position, was elated by the outcome, writing that "as a lawyer it seems to me that the Supreme Court has at last definitely put human values ahead of the 'pound of flesh' called for by a contract."[89] The Hughes Court also continued to adjudicate major cases concerning the states. In the 1934 case of Home Building & Loan Ass'n v. Blaisdell, Hughes and Roberts joined the Three Musketeers in upholding a Minnesota law that established a moratorium on mortgage payments.[88] Hughes's majority opinion in that case stated that "while an emergency does not create power, an emergency may furnish the occasion for the exercise of power."[90]

 
Portrait of Hughes as Chief Justice

Beginning with the 1935 case of Railroad Retirement Board v. Alton Railroad Co., Roberts started siding with the Four Horsemen, creating a majority bloc that struck down New Deal laws.[91] The court held that Congress had, in passing an act that provided a mandatory retirement and pension system for railroad industry workers, violated due process and exceeded the regulatory powers granted to it by the Commerce Clause.[92] Hughes strongly criticized Roberts's majority opinion in his dissent, writing that "the power committed to Congress to govern interstate commerce does not require that its government should be wise, much less that it be perfect. The power implies a broad discretion."[91] Nonetheless, in May 1935, the Supreme Court unanimously struck down three New Deal laws. Writing the majority opinion in A.L.A. Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States, Hughes held that Roosevelt's National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 was doubly unconstitutional, falling afoul of both the Commerce Clause and the nondelegation doctrine.[91]

In the 1936 case of United States v. Butler, Hughes surprised many observers by joining with Roberts and the Four Horsemen in striking down the Agricultural Adjustment Act.[93] In doing so, the court dismantled the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, the major New Deal agricultural program.[94] In another 1936 case, Carter v. Carter Coal Co., the Supreme Court struck down the Guffey Coal Act, which regulated the bituminous coal industry. Hughes wrote a concurring opinion in Carter in which he agreed with the majority's holding that Congress could not use its Commerce Clause powers to "regulate activities and relations within the states which affect interstate commerce only indirectly." In the final case of the 1936 term, Morehead v. New York ex rel. Tipaldo, Roberts joined with the Four Horsemen in striking down New York's minimum wage law.[95] President Roosevelt had held up the New York minimum wage law as a model for other states to follow, and many Republicans as well as Democrats attacked the decision for interfering with the states.[96] In December 1936, the court handed down its near-unanimous opinion in United States v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp., upholding a law that granted the president the power to place an arms embargo on Bolivia and Paraguay. Justice Sutherland's majority opinion, which Hughes joined, explained that the Constitution had granted the president broad powers to conduct foreign policy.[97]

Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937 edit

 
The Hughes Court in 1937, photographed by Erich Salomon

Roosevelt won re-election in a landslide in the 1936 presidential election, and congressional Democrats grew their majorities in both houses of Congress.[98] As the Supreme Court had already struck down both the National Industrial Recovery Act and the Agricultural Adjustment Act, the president feared that the court would next strike down other key New Deal laws, including the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (also known as the Wagner Act) and the Social Security Act.[99] In early 1937, Roosevelt proposed to increase the number of Supreme Court seats through the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937 (also known as the "court-packing plan"). Roosevelt argued that the bill was necessary because Supreme Court justices were unable to meet their case load. With large Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress, Roosevelt's bill had a strong chance of passage in early 1937.[100] However, the bill was poorly received by the public, as many saw the bill as power grab or as an attack on a sacrosanct institution.[101] Hughes worked behind the scenes to defeat the effort, rushing important New Deal legislation through the Supreme Court in an effort to quickly uphold the constitutionality of the laws.[102] He also sent a letter to Senator Burton K. Wheeler, asserting that the Supreme Court was fully capable of handling its case load. Hughes's letter had a powerful impact in discrediting Roosevelt's argument about the practical need for more Supreme Court justices.[103]

While the debate over the court-packing plan continued, the Supreme Court upheld, in a 5–4 vote, the state of Washington's minimum wage law in the case of West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish. Joined by the Three Musketeers and Roberts, Hughes wrote the majority opinion,[104] which overturned the 1923 case of Adkins v. Children's Hospital.[105] In his majority opinion, Hughes wrote that the "Constitution does not speak of freedom of contract", and further held that the Washington legislature "was entitled to adopt measures to reduce the evils of the 'sweating system,' the exploiting of workers at wages so low as to be insufficient to meet the bare cost of living."[106] Because Roberts had previously sided with the four conservative justices in Tipaldo, a similar case, it was widely perceived that Roberts agreed to uphold the constitutionality of minimum wage as a result of the pressure that was put on the Supreme Court by the court-packing plan (a theory referred to as "the switch in time that saved nine").[107] However, Hughes and Roberts both later indicated that Roberts had committed to changing his judicial stance on state minimum wage law months before Roosevelt announced his court-packing plan.[108] Roberts had voted to grant certiorari to hear the Parrish case even before the 1936 presidential election, and oral arguments for the case had taken place in late 1936.[109] In an initial conference vote held on December 19, 1936, Roberts had voted to uphold the law.[110] Scholars continue to debate why Roberts essentially switched his vote with regards to state minimum wage laws, but Hughes may have played an important role in influencing Roberts to uphold the law.[111]

Weeks after the court handed down its decision in Parrish, Hughes wrote for the majority again in NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. Joined by Roberts and the Three Musketeers, Hughes upheld the constitutionality of the Wagner Act. The Wagner Act case marked a turning point for the Supreme Court, as the court began a pattern of upholding New Deal laws.[112] Later in 1937, the court upheld both the old age benefits and the taxation system established by the Social Security Act. Meanwhile, conservative Associate Justice Willis Van Devanter announced his retirement, undercutting Roosevelt's arguments for the necessity of the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937.[113] By the end of the year, the court-packing plan had died in the Senate, and Roosevelt had been dealt a serious political wound that emboldened the conservative coalition of Southern Democrats and Republicans.[114] However, throughout 1937, Hughes had presided over a massive shift in jurisprudence that marked the end of the Lochner era, a period during which the Supreme Court had frequently struck down state and federal economic regulations.[105] Hugo Black, Roosevelt's nominee to succeed Van Devanter, was confirmed by the Senate in August 1937.[115] He was joined by Stanley Forman Reed, who succeeded Sutherland, the following year, leaving pro-New Deal liberals with a majority on the Supreme Court.[116][c]

Later tenure edit

 
Associate Justice William O. Douglas served alongside Hughes on the Supreme Court

After 1937, the Hughes Court continued to uphold economic regulations, with McReynolds and Butler often being the lone dissenters.[118] The liberal bloc was strengthened even further in 1940, when Butler was succeeded by another Roosevelt appointee, Frank Murphy.[119] In the case of United States v. Carolene Products Co., Justice Stone's majority opinion articulated a broad theory of deference to economic regulations. Carolene Products established that the Supreme Court would conduct a "rational basis review" of economic regulations, meaning that the Court would only strike down a regulation if legislators lacked a "rational basis" for passing the regulation. The Supreme Court showed that it would defer to state legislators in the cases of Madden v. Kentucky and Olsen v. Nebraska.[120] Hughes joined the majority in another case, United States v. Darby Lumber Co., which upheld the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.[121]

The Hughes Court also faced several civil rights cases. Hughes wrote the majority opinion in Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada, which required the state of Missouri to either integrate its law school or establish a separate law school for African-Americans.[122] He joined and helped arrange unanimous support for Black's majority opinion in Chambers v. Florida, which overturned the conviction of a defendant who had been coerced into confessing a crime.[123] In the 1940 case of Minersville School District v. Gobitis, Hughes joined the majority decision, which held that public schools could require students to salute the American flag despite the students' religious objections to these practices.[124]

Hughes began to consider retiring in 1940, partly due to the declining health of his wife. In June 1941, he informed Roosevelt of his impending retirement.[125] Hughes suggested that Roosevelt elevate Stone to the position of Chief Justice, a suggestion that Roosevelt accepted.[126] Hughes retired in 1941, and Stone was confirmed as the new Chief Justice, beginning the Stone Court.

Retirement and death edit

 
Hughes's gravesite

During his retirement, Hughes generally refrained from re-entering public life or giving advice on public policy, but he agreed to review the United Nations Charter for Secretary of State Cordell Hull,[127] and recommended that President Harry S. Truman appoint Fred M. Vinson as Chief Justice after the death of Stone. He lived in New York City with his wife, Antoinette, until she died in December 1945.[128] On August 27, 1948, at the age of 86, Hughes died in what is now the Tiffany Cottage of the Wianno Club in Osterville, Massachusetts. When he died, Hughes was the last living Justice to have served on the White Court.[d]

He is interred at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, New York City.[129]

Legacy edit

In the evaluation of historian Dexter Perkins, in domestic politics:

Hughes was a happy mixture of the liberal and the conservative. He was wise enough to know that you cannot preserve a social order unless you eradicate its abuses, and so he was never a stand-patter. On the other side he could see that change carried perils as well as promises. Sometimes he stood out against these perils. He was not always wise, it is true. We do not have to agree with him in everything. But he stands a noble and constructive figure in American life.[130]

In the consensus view of scholars, Hughes as a diplomat was:

an outstanding Secretary of State. He possessed a clear vision of America's position in the new international system. The United States would be a world leader, not only in terms of its ability to provide material progress, but also by its advocacy of diplomacy and arbitration over military force. Hughes was fully committed to the supremacy of negotiation and the maintenance of American foreign policy. This quality was combined with an ability to maintain a clear sense of the larger goals of American diplomacy ... He was able to maintain control over US foreign policy and take the country into a new role as a world power.[131]

Hughes has been honored in a variety of ways, including in the names of several schools, rooms, and events. Other things named for Hughes include the Hughes Range in Antarctica. On April 11, 1962, the 100th anniversary of Hughes's birth, the U.S. Post Office issued a commemorative stamp in his honor.[132] The Charles Evans Hughes House, now the Burmese ambassador's residence, in Washington, D.C., was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1972.

Judge Learned Hand once observed that Hughes was the greatest lawyer he had ever known, "except that his son (Charles Evans Hughes Jr.) was even greater."[133]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ After the appointment of Benjamin Cardozo, the liberal bloc consisted of Cardozo, Harlan Stone, and Louis Brandeis. The conservative bloc consisted of Willis Van Devanter, James Clark McReynolds, George Sutherland, and Pierce Butler.[81]
  2. ^ Justice Edward Terry Sanford had laid out the doctrine of incorporation in the majority opinion of the 1925 case of Gitlow v. New York.[82]
  3. ^ Felix Frankfurter and William O. Douglas also joined the court in 1939, succeeding Cardozo and Brandeis, respectively.[117]
  4. ^ Hughes actually outlived the last living Justice – James Clark McReynolds – to have served on the Taft Court, which followed the White Court, by just over two years.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Justices 1789 to Present". www.supremecourt.gov. Washington, D.C.: Supreme Court of the United States. from the original on April 15, 2010. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  2. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 9–11.
  3. ^ "Hughes, Charles Evans". Federal Judicial Center. from the original on September 7, 2018. Retrieved September 3, 2018.
  4. ^ Henretta 2006, pp. 119–120.
  5. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 11–14.
  6. ^ a b Ross 2007, p. 2.
  7. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 19–20.
  8. ^ Shesol 2010, pp. 25–26.
  9. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 22–23.
  10. ^ Glad, Betty (2000). "Hughes, Charles Evans (1862-1948), governor of New York, secretary of state, and chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court". American National Biography. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1100439. ISBN 978-0-19-860669-7. from the original on September 1, 2019. Retrieved October 24, 2019.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on October 20, 2007. Retrieved November 24, 2013.
  12. ^ Henretta 2006, pp. 120–121.
  13. ^ Simon 2012, p. 25.
  14. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 26–28.
  15. ^ Henretta 2006, pp. 122–123.
  16. ^ a b Henretta 2006, pp. 124–125.
  17. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 30–36.
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  19. ^ a b Henretta 2006, p. 127.
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  21. ^ Henretta 2006, pp. 129–131.
  22. ^ Henretta 2006, pp. 134–135.
  23. ^ Johnson, Robert (2010). A Global Introduction to Baptist Churches. University of Cambridge Press. p. 345.
  24. ^ Martin, Dana (Winter 1999), "The American Baptist Convention and the Civil Rights Movement: Rhetoric and Response", Baptist History and Heritage, from the original on October 17, 2015, retrieved December 14, 2019.
  25. ^ Simon 2012, p. 39.
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  27. ^ Wesser (1967), pp 252-301.
  28. ^ a b c Simon 2012, pp. 42–43.
  29. ^ Abraham 2008, pp. 132–134.
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  32. ^ a b Shoemaker 2004, pp. 63–64.
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  40. ^ Spencer C. Olin, California's Prodigal Sons: Hiram Johnson and the Progressives, 1911-1917 (1968) pp, 152-155.
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  52. ^ Trani & Wilson, pp. 109–110.
  53. ^ Trani & Wilson, pp. 142–145.
  54. ^ Toward an Entangling Alliance: American Isolationism, Internationalism, and Europe, 1901-1950 November 8, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, Ronald E. Powaski, Greenwood Press, 1991.
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  62. ^ Charles Evans Hughes by Merlo J. Pusey
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  64. ^ Simon 2012, p. 165.
  65. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 172–174, 176.
  66. ^ "Charles Evans Hughes - People - Department History - Office of the Historian". history.state.gov. United States Department of State. Retrieved September 24, 2022.
  67. ^ Abraham 2008, pp. 156–157.
  68. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 174–175.
  69. ^ Shesol 2010, pp. 27–28.
  70. ^ Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1187–1188.
  71. ^ Wittes 2006, p. 50.
  72. ^ Shesol 2010, pp. 24–25, 30.
  73. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 193–195.
  74. ^ a b c McMillion, Barry J.; Rutkus, Denis Steven (July 6, 2018). "Supreme Court Nominations, 1789 to 2017: Actions by the Senate, the Judiciary Committee, and the President" (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Congressional Research Service. (PDF) from the original on November 3, 2021. Retrieved March 9, 2022.
  75. ^ "TO RECOMMIT TO THE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY THE NOMINATION … -- Senate Vote #174 -- Feb 13, 1930". GovTrack.us. Retrieved March 13, 2022.
  76. ^ Abraham 2008, pp. 157–158.
  77. ^ Parrish 2002, p. 10.
  78. ^ Simon 2012, p. 194.
  79. ^ Parrish 2002, pp. 11–12.
  80. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 200–201.
  81. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 181–186, 246.
  82. ^ a b c Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1188–1189.
  83. ^ Shesol 2010, pp. 30–31.
  84. ^ Henretta 2006, p. 149.
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  86. ^ Simon 2012, p. 186.
  87. ^ Shesol 2010, p. 37.
  88. ^ a b Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1189–1192.
  89. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 254–257.
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  91. ^ a b c Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1192–1193.
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  93. ^ Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1193–1194.
  94. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 273–274, 282.
  95. ^ Leuchtenburg 2005, p. 1195.
  96. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 289–291.
  97. ^ Simon 2012, p. 303.
  98. ^ Simon 2012, p. 298.
  99. ^ Simon 2012, p. 306.
  100. ^ Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1196–1197.
  101. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 316–318.
  102. ^ Shesol 2010, pp. 394–397.
  103. ^ Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1196–1198.
  104. ^ Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1198–1199.
  105. ^ a b Kalman 2005, pp. 1052–1053.
  106. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 325–327.
  107. ^ McKenna 2002, p. 419.
  108. ^ Kalman 2005, p. 1054.
  109. ^ McKenna 2002, pp. 412–413.
  110. ^ McKenna 2002, p. 414.
  111. ^ Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1198–1200.
  112. ^ Leuchtenburg 2005, pp. 1200–1201.
  113. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 334–336.
  114. ^ Kalman 2005, p. 1057.
  115. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 345–347.
  116. ^ Simon 2012, p. 357.
  117. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 363–364.
  118. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 357–358, 364.
  119. ^ Simon 2012, p. 375.
  120. ^ Ross 2007, pp. 141–142.
  121. ^ Ross 2007, pp. 150–151.
  122. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 358–359.
  123. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 373–374.
  124. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 374–376.
  125. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 382–386.
  126. ^ Simon 2012, p. 387.
  127. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 387–388.
  128. ^ Simon 2012, pp. 388–389.
  129. ^ . Supreme Court Historical Society. Archived from the original on September 3, 2005. Retrieved November 24, 2013.
  130. ^ Dexter Perkins, "Charles Evans Hughes", in John A. Garraty, ed., Unforgettable Americans (1960) p. 309.
  131. ^ Edward Mihalkanin, ed., American Statesmen: Secretaries of State from John Jay to Colin Powell (2004) p. 257.
  132. ^ . Smithsonian national Postal Museum. Archived from the original on December 5, 2013. Retrieved November 24, 2013.
  133. ^ Warren, Earl (Winter 1965). "Comments on the Dedication of the Charles Evans Hughes Residence Center". Cornell Law Review. 50 (2). S2CID 153207205.

Works cited edit

  • Abraham, Henry Julian (2008). Justices, Presidents, and Senators: A History of the U.S. Supreme Court Appointments from Washington to Bush II. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780742558953.
  • Henretta, James A. (2006). "Charles Evans Hughes and the Strange Death of Liberal America". University of Illinois Law and History Review. 24 (1): 115–171. doi:10.1017/S0738248000002285. JSTOR 27641353. S2CID 145114078.
  • Kalman, Laura (2005). "The Constitution, the Supreme Court, and the New Deal". The American Historical Review. 110 (4): 1052–1080. doi:10.1086/ahr.110.4.1052. JSTOR 10.1086/ahr.110.4.1052.
  • Leuchtenburg, William E. (2005). "Charles Evans Hughes: The Center Holds". North Carolina Law Review. 83 (5): 1187–1204. from the original on November 8, 2021. Retrieved November 8, 2021.
  • McKenna, Marian C. (2002). Franklin Roosevelt and the Great Constitutional War: The Court-packing Crisis of 1937. Fordham University Press. ISBN 978-0-8232-2154-7.
  • Parrish, Michael E. (2002). The Hughes Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781576071977.
  • Ross, William G. (2007). The Chief Justiceship of Charles Evans Hughes, 1930-1941. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1570036798.
  • Shesol, Jeff (2010). Supreme Power: Franklin Roosevelt vs. the Supreme Court. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393064742.
  • Shoemaker, Rebecca S. (2004). The White Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781576079737.
  • Simon, James F. (2012). FDR and Chief Justice Hughes: The President, the Supreme Court, and the Epic Battle Over the New Deal. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1416573289.
  • Trani, Eugene P.; Wilson, David L. (1977). The Presidency of Warren G. Harding. American Presidency. The Regents Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0152-3.
  • Wesser, Robert F. (1967). Charles Evans Hughes: Politics and Reform in New York, 1905–1910. Cornell University Press. ISBN 9781501711688.
  • Wittes, Benjamin (2006). Confirmation Wars: Preserving Independent Courts in Angry Times. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-5144-2. from the original on October 3, 2015. Retrieved June 16, 2015.

Further reading edit

  • Costigliola, Frank (1976). "The United States and the Reconstruction of Germany in the 1920s". The Business History Review. 50 (4): 477–502. doi:10.2307/3113137. JSTOR 3113137. S2CID 155602870.
  • Cushman, Barry (February 1994). "Rethinking the New Deal Court". Virginia Law Review. 80 (1): 201–61. doi:10.2307/1073597. JSTOR 1073597.
  • Cushman, Clare (2001). The Supreme Court Justices: Illustrated Biographies, 1789–1995 (2nd ed.). Congressional Quarterly Books, 2001. ISBN 978-1-56802-126-3.
  • Ernst, Daniel R. (2014). Tocqueville's Nightmare: The Administrative State Emerges in America, 1900–1940. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199920860.
  • Ferrell, Robert H. (1998). The Presidency of Calvin Coolidge. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0892-8.
  • Frank, John P. (1995). Friedman, Leon; Israel, Fred L. (eds.). The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions. Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7910-1377-9.
  • Glad, Betty (1966). Charles Evans Hughes and the Illusions of Innocence: A study in American diplomacy. University of Illinois Press. OCLC 456602.
  • Gould, Lewis L. (2016). The First Modern Clash over Federal Power: Wilson versus Hughes in the Presidential Election of 1916. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700622801.
  • Hall, Kermit L., ed. (2005). The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195176612.
  • Hendel, Samuel (1968) [1951]. Charles Evans Hughes and the Supreme Court. Russell & Russell. OCLC 436337.
  • Henretta, James A. "Charles Evans Hughes and the strange death of liberal America." Law and History Review 24.1 (2006): 115–171.
  • Martin, Fenton S.; Goehlert, Robert U. (1990). The U.S. Supreme Court: A Bibliography. CQ Press. ISBN 978-0871875549.
  • McCormik, Richard L. (1978). "Prelude to Progressivism: The Transformation of New York State Politics, 1890–1910". New York History. 59 (3): 253–276. JSTOR 23169744.
  • Perkins, Dexter (1956). Charles Evans Hughes and American Democratic Statesmanship. Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313204630.
  • Pusey, Merlo J. (1951). Charles Evans Hughes. Macmillan. OCLC 14246796. Two volumes. The standard scholarly biography.
  • Shaw, Stephen K., William D. Pederson, and Michael R. Williams. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the transformation of the Supreme Court (Routledge, 2015).
  • Sibley, Katherine A. S., ed. (2014). A Companion to Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781118834473.
  • Urofsky, Melvin I. (1994). The Supreme Court Justices: A Biographical Dictionary. Garland Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8153-1176-8.

Primary sources edit

  • Hughes, Charles Evans. Addresses and papers of Charles Evans Hughes, governor of New York, 1906-1908 (GP Putnam's Sons, 1908) online
  • Hughes, Charles Evans. Addresses of Charles Evans Hughes, 1906-1916 (GP Putnam's sons, 1916) online.
  • Hughes, Charles Evans (1973). The Autobiographical Notes of Charles Evans Hughes. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674053250.

External links edit

  • Supreme Court Historical Society.
  • "Charles Evans Hughes, Presidential Contender" from C-SPAN's The Contenders
  • . List of archives with documents via . Retrieved April 15, 2005.
  • Addresses of Charles Evans Hughes, 1906–1916; with an introduction
  • Finding aid to Charles Evans Hughes papers at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of New York
1906, 1908
Succeeded by
Preceded by Republican nominee for President of the United States
1916
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of New York
1907–1910
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of State
1921–1925
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
1910–1916
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief Justice of the United States
1930–1941
Succeeded by
Non-profit organization positions
Preceded by
Lawson Purdy
President of the National Municipal League
1919–1921
Succeeded by
Henry M. Waite
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time
December 29, 1924
Succeeded by

charles, evans, hughes, other, people, named, disambiguation, april, 1862, august, 1948, american, statesman, politician, academic, jurist, served, 11th, chief, justice, united, states, from, 1930, 1941, member, republican, party, previously, 36th, governor, y. For other people named Charles Evans Hughes see Charles Evans Hughes disambiguation Charles Evans Hughes Sr April 11 1862 August 27 1948 was an American statesman politician academic and jurist who served as the 11th chief justice of the United States from 1930 to 1941 A member of the Republican Party he previously was the 36th governor of New York 1907 1910 an associate justice of the Supreme Court 1910 1916 and 44th U S secretary of state 1921 1925 As the Republican nominee in the 1916 presidential election he lost narrowly to Woodrow Wilson Charles Evans HughesHughes in 193111th Chief Justice of the United StatesIn office February 24 1930 June 30 1941 1 Nominated byHerbert HooverPreceded byWilliam Howard TaftSucceeded byHarlan F StoneJudge of the Permanent Court of International JusticeIn office September 8 1928 February 15 1930Preceded byJohn Bassett MooreSucceeded byFrank B Kellogg44th United States Secretary of StateIn office March 5 1921 March 4 1925PresidentWarren G HardingCalvin CoolidgePreceded byBainbridge ColbySucceeded byFrank B KelloggAssociate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United StatesIn office October 10 1910 June 10 1916 1 Nominated byWilliam Howard TaftPreceded byDavid Josiah BrewerSucceeded byJohn Hessin Clarke36th Governor of New YorkIn office January 1 1907 October 6 1910LieutenantLewis Stuyvesant ChanlerHorace WhitePreceded byFrank W HigginsSucceeded byHorace WhitePersonal detailsBorn 1862 04 11 April 11 1862Glens Falls New York U S DiedAugust 27 1948 1948 08 27 aged 86 Osterville Massachusetts U S Resting placeWoodlawn CemeteryPolitical partyRepublicanSpouseAntoinette Carter m 1888 died 1945 wbr Children4 including Charles and ElizabethEducationBrown University AB Columbia University LLB SignatureBorn to a Welsh immigrant preacher and his wife in Glens Falls New York Hughes graduated from Brown University and Columbia Law School and practiced law in New York City After working in private practice for several years in 1905 he led successful state investigations into public utilities and the life insurance industry He won election as the governor of New York in 1906 and implemented several progressive reforms In 1910 President William Howard Taft appointed Hughes as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States During his tenure on the Supreme Court Hughes often joined Associate Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr in voting to uphold state and federal regulations Hughes served as an associate justice until 1916 when he resigned from the bench to accept the Republican presidential nomination Though Hughes was widely viewed as the favorite in the race against incumbent Democratic President Woodrow Wilson Wilson won a narrow victory After Warren G Harding won the 1920 presidential election Hughes accepted Harding s invitation to serve as secretary of state Serving under Harding and Calvin Coolidge he negotiated the Washington Naval Treaty which was designed to prevent a naval arms race among the United States the United Kingdom and Japan Hughes left office in 1925 and returned to private practice becoming one of the most prominent attorneys in the country In 1930 President Herbert Hoover appointed him to succeed Chief Justice Taft Along with Associate Justice Owen Roberts Hughes emerged as a key swing vote on the bench positioned between the liberal Three Musketeers and the conservative Four Horsemen The Hughes Court struck down several New Deal programs in the early and the mid 1930s but 1937 marked a turning point for the Supreme Court and the New Deal as Hughes and Roberts joined with the Three Musketeers to uphold the Wagner Act and a state minimum wage law That same year saw the defeat of the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937 which would have expanded the size of the Supreme Court Hughes served until 1941 when he retired and was succeeded by Associate Justice Harlan F Stone Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Legal and academic career 2 1 Exposing corrupt utilities 2 2 Exposing corrupt insurance companies 3 Governor of New York 3 1 Reforming state government 3 2 Organizing the Baptists 3 3 Disappointing second term as governor 4 Associate Justice 5 Presidential candidate 5 1 Return to law practice and political advising 6 Secretary of State 6 1 Washington Naval Treaty 6 2 Other issues 7 Return to private practice 8 Judge of the Permanent Court of International Justice 9 Chief Justice 9 1 Rejoining the Supreme Court 9 2 Roosevelt takes office 9 3 Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937 9 4 Later tenure 10 Retirement and death 11 Legacy 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 14 1 Works cited 15 Further reading 15 1 Primary sources 16 External linksEarly life and family edit nbsp Hughes at the age of 16Hughes s father David Charles Hughes immigrated to the United States from Wales in 1855 after he was inspired by The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin David became a Baptist preacher in Glens Falls New York and married Mary Catherine Connelly whose family had been in the United States for several generations 2 Charles Evans Hughes the only child of David and Mary was born in Glens Falls on April 11 1862 3 4 The Hughes family moved to Oswego New York in 1866 but relocated soon after to Newark New Jersey and then to Brooklyn With the exception of a brief period of attendance at Newark High School Hughes received no formal education until 1874 instead being educated by his parents In September 1874 he enrolled in New York City s prestigious Public School 35 graduating the following year 5 At the age of 14 Hughes attended Madison University now Colgate University for two years before transferring to Brown University He graduated from Brown third in his class at the age of 19 having been elected to Phi Beta Kappa in his junior year He was also a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity where he served as the first international President later on 6 During his time at Brown Hughes volunteered for the successful presidential campaign of Republican nominee James A Garfield in the 1880 presidential election a fraternity brother of his in Delta Upsilon where Garfield was an undergraduate at Williams College and served as the editor of the college newspaper After graduating from Brown Hughes spent a year working as a teacher in Delhi New York 7 He next enrolled in Columbia Law School where he graduated first in his class in 1884 6 That same year he passed the New York bar exam with the highest score ever awarded by the state 8 In 1888 Hughes married Antoinette Carter the daughter of the senior partner of the law firm where he worked Their first child Charles Evans Hughes Jr was born the following year and Hughes purchased a house in Manhattan s Upper West Side neighborhood 9 Hughes and his wife had one son and three daughters 10 Their youngest child Elizabeth Hughes was one of the first humans injected with insulin and later served as president of the Supreme Court Historical Society 11 Legal and academic career edit nbsp Hughes with his wife and children c 1916Hughes took a position with the Wall Street law firm of Chamberlain Carter amp Hornblower in 1883 focusing primarily on matters related to contracts and bankruptcies He was made a partner in the firm in 1888 and the firm changed its name to Carter Hughes amp Cravath it later became known as Hughes Hubbard amp Reed Hughes left the firm and became a professor at Cornell Law School from 1891 to 1893 He returned to Carter Hughes amp Cravath in 1893 12 He also joined the board of Brown University and served on a special committee that recommended revisions to New York s Code of Civil Procedure 13 Exposing corrupt utilities edit Responding to newspaper stories run by the New York World Governor Frank W Higgins appointed a legislative committee to investigate the state s public utilities in 1905 On the recommendation of a former state judge who had been impressed by Hughes s performance in court the legislative committee appointed Hughes to lead the investigation Hughes was reluctant to take on the powerful utility companies but Senator Frederick C Stevens the leader of the committee convinced Hughes to accept the position Hughes decided to center his investigation on Consolidated Gas which controlled the production and sale of gas in New York City 14 Though few expected the committee to have any impact on public corruption Hughes was able to show that Consolidated Gas had engaged in a pattern of tax evasion and fraudulent bookkeeping To eliminate or mitigate those abuses Hughes drafted and convinced the state legislature to pass bills that established a commission to regulate public utilities and lowered gas prices 15 Exposing corrupt insurance companies edit Hughes s success made him a popular public figure in New York and he was appointed counsel to the Armstrong Insurance Commission which investigated the major life insurance companies headquartered in New York 16 His examination of the insurance industry uncovered payments made to journalists and lobbyists as well as payments and other forms of compensation directed to legislators serving throughout the country His investigation also showed that many top insurance executives had various conflicts of interest and had received huge raises at the same time that dividends to policyholders had fallen Seeking to remove Hughes from the investigation Republican leaders nominated him as the party s candidate for Mayor of New York City but Hughes refused the nomination His efforts ultimately resulted in the resignation or firing of the most of the top ranking officials in the three major life insurance companies in the United States 17 Following the investigation Hughes convinced the state legislature to bar insurance companies from owning corporate stock underwriting securities or engaging in other banking practices 16 Governor of New York edit nbsp Gubernatorial portrait of Charles Evans HughesSeeking a strong candidate to defeat newspaper mogul William Randolph Hearst in the 1906 New York gubernatorial election President Theodore Roosevelt convinced New York Republican leaders to nominate Hughes for governor Roosevelt described Hughes as a sane and sincere reformer who really has fought against the very evils which Hearst denounces but is free from any taint of demagogy 18 In his campaign for governor Hughes attacked the corruption of specific companies but defended corporations as a necessary part of the economy He also called for an eight hour workday on public works projects and favored prohibitions on child labor 19 Hughes was not a charismatic speaker but he campaigned vigorously throughout the state and won the endorsements of most newspapers 20 Ultimately Hughes defeated Hearst in a close election taking 52 percent of the vote 19 Reforming state government edit Hughes s governorship focused largely on reforming the government and addressing political corruption He expanded the number of civil service positions increased the power of the public utility regulatory commissions and won passage of laws that placed limits on political donations by corporations and required political candidates to track campaign receipts and expenditures 21 He also signed laws that barred younger workers from several dangerous occupations and established a maximum 48 hour workweek for manufacturing workers under the age of 16 To enforce those laws Hughes reorganized the New York State Department of Labor Hughes s labor policies were influenced by economist Richard T Ely who sought to improve working conditions for laborers but rejected the more far reaching reforms favored by union leaders like Samuel Gompers 22 Organizing the Baptists edit The busy governor found time to get involved in religious matters A lifelong Northern Baptist Hughes participated in the creation of the Northern Baptist Convention in May 1907 Hughes served the convention as its first president beginning the task of unifying the thousands of independent Baptist churches across the North into one denomination Previously northern Baptists had only connected between local churches through mission societies and benevolent causes The Northern Baptist Convention went on to become the historically important American Baptist Churches USA which made this aspect of Hughes s life during his governorship a key part of his historical influence 23 24 Disappointing second term as governor edit However Hughes s political role was changing He had previously been close with Roosevelt but relations between Hughes and the president cooled after a dispute over a minor federal appointment 25 Roosevelt chose not to seek re election in 1908 instead endorsing Secretary of War William Howard Taft as his preferred successor Taft won the Republican presidential nomination and asked Hughes to serve as his running mate but Hughes declined the offer Hughes also considered retiring from the governorship but Taft and Roosevelt convinced him to seek a second term Despite having little support among some of the more conservative leaders of the state party Hughes won re election in the 1908 election Hughes s second term proved to be less successful than his first His highest priority was a direct primary law and it repeatedly failed to pass He did obtain increased regulation over telephone and telegraph companies and won passage of the first workers compensation bill in U S history 26 27 Associate Justice editSee also White Court judges nbsp Hughes struck up a close friendship with Associate Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr By early 1910 Hughes was anxious to retire from his position as governor 28 A vacancy on the Supreme Court arose following the death of Associate Justice David J Brewer and Taft offered the position to Hughes who quickly accepted the offer 28 His nomination was formally received by the Senate on April 25 1910 The Senate Judiciary Committee reported favorably on his nomination on May 2 1910 and the Senate unanimously confirmed him the same day 28 Two months after Hughes s confirmation but prior to his taking the judicial oath Chief Justice Melville W Fuller died Taft elevated Associate Justice Edward Douglass White to the position of Chief Justice despite having previously indicated to Hughes that he might select Hughes as Chief Justice White s candidacy for the position was bolstered by his long experience on the bench and popularity among his fellow justices as well as Theodore Roosevelt s coolness towards Hughes 29 Hughes was sworn in to the Supreme Court on October 10 1910 and quickly struck up friendships with other members of the Court including Chief Justice White Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan and Associate Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr 30 In the disposition of cases however Hughes tended to align with Holmes He voted to uphold state laws providing for minimum wages workmen s compensation and maximum work hours for women and children 31 He also wrote several opinions upholding the power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce under the Commerce Clause His majority opinion in Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad vs Interstate Commerce Commission upheld the right of the federal government to regulate the hours of railroad workers 32 His majority opinion in the 1914 Shreveport Rate Case upheld the Interstate Commerce Commission s decision to void discriminatory railroad rates imposed by the Railroad Commission of Texas The decision established that the federal government could regulate intrastate commerce when it affected interstate commerce though Hughes avoided directly overruling the 1895 case of United States v E C Knight Co 33 He also wrote a series of opinions that upheld civil liberties in one such case McCabe v Atchison Topeka amp Santa Fe Railway Co Hughes s majority opinion required railroad carriers to give African Americans equal treatment 34 Hughes s majority opinion in Bailey v Alabama invalidated a state law that had made it a crime for a laborer to fail to complete obligations agreed to in a labor contract Hughes held that this law violated the Thirteenth Amendment and discriminated against African American workers 32 He also joined the majority decision in the 1915 case of Guinn v United States which outlawed the use of grandfather clauses to determine voter enfranchisement 35 Hughes and Holmes were the only dissenters from the court s ruling that affirmed a lower court s decision to withhold a writ of habeas corpus from Leo Frank a Jewish factory manager convicted of murder in the state of Georgia 36 Presidential candidate editFurther information 1916 United States presidential election nbsp Hughes in Winona Minnesota during the 1916 presidential campaign campaigning on the OlympianTaft and Roosevelt endured a bitter split during Taft s presidency and Roosevelt challenged Taft for the 1912 Republican presidential nomination Taft won re nomination but Roosevelt ran on the ticket of a third party the Progressive Party 37 With the split in the Republican Party Democratic Governor Woodrow Wilson defeated Taft and Roosevelt in the 1912 presidential election and enacted his progressive New Freedom agenda 38 Seeking to bridge the divide in the Republican Party and limit Wilson to a single term several Republican leaders asked Hughes to consider running in the 1916 presidential election Hughes at first rebuffed those entreaties but his potential candidacy became the subject of widespread speculation and polls showed that he was the preferred candidate of many Republican voters By the time of the June 1916 Republican National Convention Hughes had won two presidential primaries and his backers had lined up the support of numerous delegates Hughes led on the first presidential ballot of the convention and clinched the nomination on the third ballot Hughes accepted the nomination becoming the first and only sitting Supreme Court Justice to serve as a major party s presidential nominee and submitted his resignation to President Wilson Roosevelt meanwhile declined to run again on a third party ticket leaving Hughes and Wilson as the only major candidates in the race 39 nbsp 1916 electoral vote resultsBecause of the Republican Party s dominance in presidential elections held since the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860 Hughes was widely regarded as the favorite even though Wilson was the incumbent His candidacy was further boosted by his own reputation for intelligence personal integrity and moderation Hughes also won the public support of both Taft and Roosevelt though Roosevelt remained uneasy with Hughes who he feared would be a Wilson with whiskers However the 1912 split in Republican ranks remained a lingering issue and Hughes damaged his campaign by deciding to base his California campaign with the conservative Republican regulars Hiram Johnson the Governor of California who had been Roosevelt s running mate in the 1912 election endorsed Hughes but the Progressive forces ignored Hughes 40 Nationally because of Hughes s opposition to the Adamson Act and the Sixteenth Amendment most former Progressive Party leaders endorsed Wilson 41 By election day Hughes was still generally considered to be the favorite He performed strongly in the Northeast and early election returns looked good Nevertheless Woodrow Wilson as expected swept the Solid South while also winning several states in the Midwest and Great Plains where his candidacy was boosted by a strong antiwar sentiment Wilson ultimately prevailed after winning the decisive state of California by fewer than 4 000 votes 42 Return to law practice and political advising edit After the election Hughes turned down offers from larger organizations and returned to his small law firm now known as Hughes Rounds Schurman amp Dwight 43 In March 1917 Hughes joined with many other Republican leaders in demanding that Wilson declare war on the Central Powers after Germany sank several American merchant ships The next month Wilson asked Congress for a declaration of war and the United States entered World War I 44 Hughes supported Wilson s military policies including the imposition of the draft and he served as chairman of New York City s draft appeals board He also investigated the aircraft industry on behalf of the Wilson administration exposing numerous inefficiencies 45 He once again returned to private practice after the war serving a wide array of clients including five Socialists who had been expelled from the New York legislature for their political beliefs 46 He sought to broker a compromise between President Wilson and Senate Republicans regarding US entrance into Wilson s proposed League of Nations but the Senate rejected the League and the Treaty of Versailles 47 With Wilson s popularity declining many Republican leaders believed that their party would win the 1920 presidential election Hughes remained popular in the party and many influential Republicans favored him as the party s candidate in 1920 Hughes was struck by personal tragedy when his daughter Helen died in 1920 of tuberculosis and he refused to allow his name to be considered for the presidential nomination at the 1920 Republican National Convention The party instead nominated a ticket consisting of Senator Warren G Harding of Ohio and Governor Calvin Coolidge of Massachusetts 48 The Republican ticket won in a landslide taking 61 percent of the popular vote 49 Secretary of State editFurther information Presidency of Warren G Harding and Presidency of Calvin Coolidge nbsp Hughes s residence in 1921Shortly after Harding s victory in the 1920 election Hughes accepted the position of Secretary of State 49 After the death of Chief Justice White in May 1921 Hughes was mentioned as a potential successor Hughes told Harding he was uninterested in leaving the State Department and Harding instead appointed former President Taft as the Chief Justice 50 Harding granted Hughes a great deal of discretion in his leadership of the State Department and US foreign policy 51 Harding and Hughes frequently communicated Hughes worked within some broad outlines and the president remained well informed However the President rarely overrode any of Hughes s decisions with the big and obvious exception of the League of Nations 52 After taking office President Harding hardened his stance on the League of Nations to deciding the US would not join even a scaled down version 53 Another view is that Harding favored joining with reservations when he assumed office on March 4 1921 but Senators staunchly opposed the Irreconcilables per Ronald E Powaski s 1991 book threatened to wreck the new administration 54 Hughes favored membership in the League Early in his tenure as Secretary of State he asked the Senate to vote on the Treaty of Versailles 55 but he yielded to either Harding s changing views and or the political reality within the Senate Instead he convinced Harding of the necessity of a separate treaty with Germany resulting in the signing and eventual ratification of the U S German Peace Treaty 56 Hughes also favored US entrance into the Permanent Court of International Justice but was unable to convince the Senate to provide support 57 Washington Naval Treaty edit Hughes s major initiative in office was preventing an arms race among the three great naval powers of Britain Japan and the United States After Senator William Borah led passage of a resolution calling on the Harding administration to negotiate an arms reduction treaty with Japan and Britain Hughes convinced those countries as well as Italy and France to attend a naval conference in Washington Hughes selected an American delegation consisting of himself former Secretary of State Elihu Root Republican Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and Democratic Senator Oscar Underwood Hughes hoped that the selection of Underwood would ensure bipartisan support for any treaty arising from the conference Prior to the conference Hughes had carefully considered possible treaty terms since each side would seek terms that would provide its respective navy with subtle advantages He decided to propose an arms reduction formula based on the immediate halting of all naval construction with future construction limits based on the ship tonnage of each country The formula would be based on the ship tonnage ratio of 1920 which stood at roughly 5 5 3 for the United States Britain and Japan respectively Knowing that US and foreign naval leaders would resist his proposal he anxiously guarded it from the press but he won the support of Root Lodge and Underwood 58 The Washington Naval Conference opened in November 1921 attended by five national delegations and in the gallery by hundreds of reporters and dignitaries such as Chief Justice Taft and William Jennings Bryan On the first day of the conference Hughes unveiled his proposal to limit naval armaments Hughes s ambitious proposal to scrap all US capital ships under construction stunned the delegates as did his proposals for the Japanese and British Navies 59 The British delegation led by Arthur Balfour supported the proposal but the Japanese delegation under the leadership of Katō Tomosaburō asked for several modifications Katō asked for the ratio to be adjusted to 10 10 7 and refused to destroy the Mutsu a dreadnought that many Japanese saw as a symbol of national pride Katō eventually relented on the naval ratios but Hughes acquiesced to the retention of the Mutsu leading to protests from British leaders Hughes clinched an agreement after convincing Balfour to agree to limit the size of the Admiral class battlecruisers despite objections from the British Navy Hughes also won agreement on the Four Power Treaty which called for a peaceful resolution of territorial claims in the Pacific Ocean as well as the Nine Power Treaty which guaranteed the territorial integrity of China News of the success of the conference was warmly received around the world Franklin D Roosevelt later wrote that the conference brought to the world the first important voluntary agreement for limitation and reduction of armament 60 nbsp Hughes fourth from right leads a delegation to Brazil with Carl Theodore Vogelgesang in 1922Other issues edit See also Banana Wars In the aftermath of World War I the German economy struggled from the strain of postwar rebuilding and war reparations owed to the Entente and the Entente powers in turn owed large war debts to the United States Though many economists favored cancellation of all European war debts French leaders were unwilling to cancel the reparations and Congress refused to consider forgiving the war debts Hughes helped organize the creation of an international committee of economists to study the possibility of lowering Germany s reparations and Hughes selected Charles G Dawes to lead that committee The resulting Dawes Plan which provided for annual payments by Germany was accepted at a 1924 conference held in London 61 nbsp Autochrome portrait by Georges Chevalier 1924Hughes favored a closer relationship with the United Kingdom and sought to coordinate US foreign policy with Great Britain concerning matters in Europe and Asia 62 Hughes sought better relations with the countries of Latin America and he favored removing US troops when he believed that doing so was practicable He formulated plans for the withdrawal of US soldiers from the Dominican Republic and Nicaragua but decided that instability in Haiti required the continued presence of US soldiers He also settled a border dispute between Panama and Costa Rica by threatening to send soldiers into Panama 63 Hughes was the keynote speaker at the 1919 National Conference on Lynching Return to private practice editHughes stayed on as Secretary of State in the Coolidge administration after the death of Harding in 1923 but he left office in early 1925 64 He once again returned to his law firm becoming one of the highest earning lawyers in the country He also served as a special master in a case concerning Chicago s sewage system was elected president of the American Bar Association and co founded the National Conference on Christians and Jews State party leaders asked him to run against Al Smith in New York s 1926 gubernatorial election and some national party leaders suggested that he run for president in 1928 but Hughes declined to seek public office After the 1928 Republican National Convention nominated Herbert Hoover Hughes gave Hoover his full support and campaigned for him across the United States Hoover won the election in a landslide and asked Hughes to serve as his Secretary of State but Hughes declined the offer to keep his commitment to serve as a judge on the Permanent Court of International Justice 65 Judge of the Permanent Court of International Justice editHughes served on the Permanent Court of International Justice from 1928 until 1930 66 Chief Justice editSee also Hughes Court List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Hughes Court and Herbert Hoover Supreme Court candidates Rejoining the Supreme Court edit nbsp Time cover December 29 1924On February 3 1930 President Hoover nominated Hughes to succeed Chief Justice Taft who was gravely ill Though many had expected Hoover to elevate his close friend Associate Justice Harlan Stone Hughes was the top choice of Taft and Attorney General William D Mitchell 67 68 Though Hughes had compiled a progressive record during his tenure as an Associate Justice by 1930 Taft believed that Hughes would be a consistent conservative on the court 69 The nomination faced resistance from progressive Republicans such as senators George W Norris and William E Borah who were concerned that Hughes would be overly friendly to big business after working as a corporate lawyer 70 71 Many of those progressives as well some Southern states rights advocates were outraged by the Taft Court s tendency to strike down state and federal legislation on the basis of the doctrine of substantive due process and feared that a Hughes Court would emulate the Taft Court 72 Adherents of the substantive due process doctrine held that economic regulations such as restrictions on child labor and minimum wages violated freedom of contract which they argued could not be abridged by federal and state laws because of the Fifth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment 73 The Senate Judiciary Committee held no hearings and voted to favorably report on Hughes s nomination by a 10 2 vote on February 10 1930 74 On February 13 1930 the Senate voted 31 49 against sending his nomination back to committee 74 75 After a brief but bitter confirmation battle Hughes was confirmed by the Senate on February 13 1930 in a 52 26 vote 74 76 and he took his judicial oath of office on February 24 1930 1 Hughes s son Charles Jr was subsequently forced to resign as Solicitor General after his father took office as Chief Justice 77 Hughes quickly emerged as a leader of the Court earning the admiration of his fellow justices for his intelligence energy and strong understanding of the law 78 Shortly after Hughes was confirmed Hoover nominated federal judge John J Parker to succeed deceased Associate Justice Edward Terry Sanford The Senate rejected Parker whose earlier rulings had alienated labor unions and the NAACP but confirmed Hoover s second nominee Owen Roberts 79 In early 1932 the other justices asked Hughes to request the resignation of Oliver Wendell Holmes whose health had declined as he entered his nineties Hughes privately asked his old friend to retire and Holmes immediately sent a letter of resignation to President Hoover To replace Holmes Hoover nominated Benjamin N Cardozo who quickly won confirmation 80 The early Hughes Court was divided between the conservative Four Horsemen and the liberal Three Musketeers a 82 The primary difference between these two blocs was that the Four Horsemen embraced the substantive due process doctrine but the liberals including Louis Brandeis advocated for judicial restraint or deference to legislative bodies 83 Hughes and Roberts were the swing justices between the two blocs for much of the 1930s 84 nbsp Antoinette Carter HughesIn one of the first major cases of his tenure Hughes joined with Roberts and the Three Musketeers to strike down a piece of state legislation in the 1931 landmark case of Near v Minnesota In his majority opinion Hughes held that the First Amendment barred states from violating freedom of the press Hughes also wrote the majority opinion in Stromberg v California which represented the first time the Supreme Court struck down a state law on the basis of the incorporation of the Bill of Rights b 82 In another early case O Gorman amp Young Inc v Hartford Fire Insurance Co Hughes and Roberts joined with the liberal bloc in upholding a state regulation that limited commissions for the sale of fire insurance 85 Roosevelt takes office editDuring Hoover s presidency the country plunged into the Great Depression 86 As the country faced an ongoing economic calamity Franklin D Roosevelt decisively defeated Hoover in the 1932 presidential election 87 Responding to the Great Depression Roosevelt passed a bevy of domestic legislation as part of his New Deal domestic program and the response to the New Deal became one of the key issues facing the Hughes Court In the Gold Clause Cases a series of cases that presented some of the first major tests of New Deal laws the Hughes Court upheld the voiding of the gold clauses in private and public contracts that was favored by the Roosevelt administration 88 Roosevelt who had expected the Supreme Court to rule adversely to his administration s position was elated by the outcome writing that as a lawyer it seems to me that the Supreme Court has at last definitely put human values ahead of the pound of flesh called for by a contract 89 The Hughes Court also continued to adjudicate major cases concerning the states In the 1934 case of Home Building amp Loan Ass n v Blaisdell Hughes and Roberts joined the Three Musketeers in upholding a Minnesota law that established a moratorium on mortgage payments 88 Hughes s majority opinion in that case stated that while an emergency does not create power an emergency may furnish the occasion for the exercise of power 90 nbsp Portrait of Hughes as Chief JusticeBeginning with the 1935 case of Railroad Retirement Board v Alton Railroad Co Roberts started siding with the Four Horsemen creating a majority bloc that struck down New Deal laws 91 The court held that Congress had in passing an act that provided a mandatory retirement and pension system for railroad industry workers violated due process and exceeded the regulatory powers granted to it by the Commerce Clause 92 Hughes strongly criticized Roberts s majority opinion in his dissent writing that the power committed to Congress to govern interstate commerce does not require that its government should be wise much less that it be perfect The power implies a broad discretion 91 Nonetheless in May 1935 the Supreme Court unanimously struck down three New Deal laws Writing the majority opinion in A L A Schechter Poultry Corp v United States Hughes held that Roosevelt s National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 was doubly unconstitutional falling afoul of both the Commerce Clause and the nondelegation doctrine 91 In the 1936 case of United States v Butler Hughes surprised many observers by joining with Roberts and the Four Horsemen in striking down the Agricultural Adjustment Act 93 In doing so the court dismantled the Agricultural Adjustment Administration the major New Deal agricultural program 94 In another 1936 case Carter v Carter Coal Co the Supreme Court struck down the Guffey Coal Act which regulated the bituminous coal industry Hughes wrote a concurring opinion in Carter in which he agreed with the majority s holding that Congress could not use its Commerce Clause powers to regulate activities and relations within the states which affect interstate commerce only indirectly In the final case of the 1936 term Morehead v New York ex rel Tipaldo Roberts joined with the Four Horsemen in striking down New York s minimum wage law 95 President Roosevelt had held up the New York minimum wage law as a model for other states to follow and many Republicans as well as Democrats attacked the decision for interfering with the states 96 In December 1936 the court handed down its near unanimous opinion in United States v Curtiss Wright Export Corp upholding a law that granted the president the power to place an arms embargo on Bolivia and Paraguay Justice Sutherland s majority opinion which Hughes joined explained that the Constitution had granted the president broad powers to conduct foreign policy 97 Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937 edit nbsp The Hughes Court in 1937 photographed by Erich SalomonRoosevelt won re election in a landslide in the 1936 presidential election and congressional Democrats grew their majorities in both houses of Congress 98 As the Supreme Court had already struck down both the National Industrial Recovery Act and the Agricultural Adjustment Act the president feared that the court would next strike down other key New Deal laws including the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 also known as the Wagner Act and the Social Security Act 99 In early 1937 Roosevelt proposed to increase the number of Supreme Court seats through the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937 also known as the court packing plan Roosevelt argued that the bill was necessary because Supreme Court justices were unable to meet their case load With large Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress Roosevelt s bill had a strong chance of passage in early 1937 100 However the bill was poorly received by the public as many saw the bill as power grab or as an attack on a sacrosanct institution 101 Hughes worked behind the scenes to defeat the effort rushing important New Deal legislation through the Supreme Court in an effort to quickly uphold the constitutionality of the laws 102 He also sent a letter to Senator Burton K Wheeler asserting that the Supreme Court was fully capable of handling its case load Hughes s letter had a powerful impact in discrediting Roosevelt s argument about the practical need for more Supreme Court justices 103 While the debate over the court packing plan continued the Supreme Court upheld in a 5 4 vote the state of Washington s minimum wage law in the case of West Coast Hotel Co v Parrish Joined by the Three Musketeers and Roberts Hughes wrote the majority opinion 104 which overturned the 1923 case of Adkins v Children s Hospital 105 In his majority opinion Hughes wrote that the Constitution does not speak of freedom of contract and further held that the Washington legislature was entitled to adopt measures to reduce the evils of the sweating system the exploiting of workers at wages so low as to be insufficient to meet the bare cost of living 106 Because Roberts had previously sided with the four conservative justices in Tipaldo a similar case it was widely perceived that Roberts agreed to uphold the constitutionality of minimum wage as a result of the pressure that was put on the Supreme Court by the court packing plan a theory referred to as the switch in time that saved nine 107 However Hughes and Roberts both later indicated that Roberts had committed to changing his judicial stance on state minimum wage law months before Roosevelt announced his court packing plan 108 Roberts had voted to grant certiorari to hear the Parrish case even before the 1936 presidential election and oral arguments for the case had taken place in late 1936 109 In an initial conference vote held on December 19 1936 Roberts had voted to uphold the law 110 Scholars continue to debate why Roberts essentially switched his vote with regards to state minimum wage laws but Hughes may have played an important role in influencing Roberts to uphold the law 111 Weeks after the court handed down its decision in Parrish Hughes wrote for the majority again in NLRB v Jones amp Laughlin Steel Corp Joined by Roberts and the Three Musketeers Hughes upheld the constitutionality of the Wagner Act The Wagner Act case marked a turning point for the Supreme Court as the court began a pattern of upholding New Deal laws 112 Later in 1937 the court upheld both the old age benefits and the taxation system established by the Social Security Act Meanwhile conservative Associate Justice Willis Van Devanter announced his retirement undercutting Roosevelt s arguments for the necessity of the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937 113 By the end of the year the court packing plan had died in the Senate and Roosevelt had been dealt a serious political wound that emboldened the conservative coalition of Southern Democrats and Republicans 114 However throughout 1937 Hughes had presided over a massive shift in jurisprudence that marked the end of the Lochner era a period during which the Supreme Court had frequently struck down state and federal economic regulations 105 Hugo Black Roosevelt s nominee to succeed Van Devanter was confirmed by the Senate in August 1937 115 He was joined by Stanley Forman Reed who succeeded Sutherland the following year leaving pro New Deal liberals with a majority on the Supreme Court 116 c Later tenure edit nbsp Associate Justice William O Douglas served alongside Hughes on the Supreme CourtAfter 1937 the Hughes Court continued to uphold economic regulations with McReynolds and Butler often being the lone dissenters 118 The liberal bloc was strengthened even further in 1940 when Butler was succeeded by another Roosevelt appointee Frank Murphy 119 In the case of United States v Carolene Products Co Justice Stone s majority opinion articulated a broad theory of deference to economic regulations Carolene Products established that the Supreme Court would conduct a rational basis review of economic regulations meaning that the Court would only strike down a regulation if legislators lacked a rational basis for passing the regulation The Supreme Court showed that it would defer to state legislators in the cases of Madden v Kentucky and Olsen v Nebraska 120 Hughes joined the majority in another case United States v Darby Lumber Co which upheld the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 121 The Hughes Court also faced several civil rights cases Hughes wrote the majority opinion in Missouri ex rel Gaines v Canada which required the state of Missouri to either integrate its law school or establish a separate law school for African Americans 122 He joined and helped arrange unanimous support for Black s majority opinion in Chambers v Florida which overturned the conviction of a defendant who had been coerced into confessing a crime 123 In the 1940 case of Minersville School District v Gobitis Hughes joined the majority decision which held that public schools could require students to salute the American flag despite the students religious objections to these practices 124 Hughes began to consider retiring in 1940 partly due to the declining health of his wife In June 1941 he informed Roosevelt of his impending retirement 125 Hughes suggested that Roosevelt elevate Stone to the position of Chief Justice a suggestion that Roosevelt accepted 126 Hughes retired in 1941 and Stone was confirmed as the new Chief Justice beginning the Stone Court Retirement and death edit nbsp Hughes s gravesiteDuring his retirement Hughes generally refrained from re entering public life or giving advice on public policy but he agreed to review the United Nations Charter for Secretary of State Cordell Hull 127 and recommended that President Harry S Truman appoint Fred M Vinson as Chief Justice after the death of Stone He lived in New York City with his wife Antoinette until she died in December 1945 128 On August 27 1948 at the age of 86 Hughes died in what is now the Tiffany Cottage of the Wianno Club in Osterville Massachusetts When he died Hughes was the last living Justice to have served on the White Court d He is interred at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx New York City 129 Legacy editIn the evaluation of historian Dexter Perkins in domestic politics Hughes was a happy mixture of the liberal and the conservative He was wise enough to know that you cannot preserve a social order unless you eradicate its abuses and so he was never a stand patter On the other side he could see that change carried perils as well as promises Sometimes he stood out against these perils He was not always wise it is true We do not have to agree with him in everything But he stands a noble and constructive figure in American life 130 In the consensus view of scholars Hughes as a diplomat was an outstanding Secretary of State He possessed a clear vision of America s position in the new international system The United States would be a world leader not only in terms of its ability to provide material progress but also by its advocacy of diplomacy and arbitration over military force Hughes was fully committed to the supremacy of negotiation and the maintenance of American foreign policy This quality was combined with an ability to maintain a clear sense of the larger goals of American diplomacy He was able to maintain control over US foreign policy and take the country into a new role as a world power 131 Hughes has been honored in a variety of ways including in the names of several schools rooms and events Other things named for Hughes include the Hughes Range in Antarctica On April 11 1962 the 100th anniversary of Hughes s birth the U S Post Office issued a commemorative stamp in his honor 132 The Charles Evans Hughes House now the Burmese ambassador s residence in Washington D C was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1972 Judge Learned Hand once observed that Hughes was the greatest lawyer he had ever known except that his son Charles Evans Hughes Jr was even greater 133 See also edit nbsp New York state portalDemographics of the Supreme Court of the United States List of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States List of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States Seat 6 List of United States Supreme Court cases by the White CourtNotes edit After the appointment of Benjamin Cardozo the liberal bloc consisted of Cardozo Harlan Stone and Louis Brandeis The conservative bloc consisted of Willis Van Devanter James Clark McReynolds George Sutherland and Pierce Butler 81 Justice Edward Terry Sanford had laid out the doctrine of incorporation in the majority opinion of the 1925 case of Gitlow v New York 82 Felix Frankfurter and William O Douglas also joined the court in 1939 succeeding Cardozo and Brandeis respectively 117 Hughes actually outlived the last living Justice James Clark McReynolds to have served on the Taft Court which followed the White Court by just over two years References edit a b c Justices 1789 to Present www supremecourt gov Washington D C Supreme Court of the United States Archived from the original on April 15 2010 Retrieved January 19 2019 Simon 2012 pp 9 11 Hughes Charles Evans Federal Judicial Center Archived from the original on September 7 2018 Retrieved September 3 2018 Henretta 2006 pp 119 120 Simon 2012 pp 11 14 a b Ross 2007 p 2 Simon 2012 pp 19 20 Shesol 2010 pp 25 26 Simon 2012 pp 22 23 Glad Betty 2000 Hughes Charles Evans 1862 1948 governor of New York secretary of state and chief justice of the U S Supreme Court American National Biography doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 1100439 ISBN 978 0 19 860669 7 Archived from the original on September 1 2019 Retrieved October 24 2019 Elizabeth Hughes Fifty eight years on animal insulin Archived from the original on October 20 2007 Retrieved November 24 2013 Henretta 2006 pp 120 121 Simon 2012 p 25 Simon 2012 pp 26 28 Henretta 2006 pp 122 123 a b Henretta 2006 pp 124 125 Simon 2012 pp 30 36 Henretta 2006 pp 125 126 a b Henretta 2006 p 127 Simon 2012 pp 37 38 Henretta 2006 pp 129 131 Henretta 2006 pp 134 135 Johnson Robert 2010 A Global Introduction to Baptist Churches University of Cambridge Press p 345 Martin Dana Winter 1999 The American Baptist Convention and the Civil Rights Movement Rhetoric and Response Baptist History and Heritage archived from the original on October 17 2015 retrieved December 14 2019 Simon 2012 p 39 Simon 2012 pp 41 42 Wesser 1967 pp 252 301 a b c Simon 2012 pp 42 43 Abraham 2008 pp 132 134 Simon 2012 pp 45 46 Shesol 2010 p 27 a b Shoemaker 2004 pp 63 64 Henretta 2006 pp 136 137 Henretta 2006 p 150 Shoemaker 2004 p 224 Simon 2012 pp 47 48 Simon 2012 p 82 Henretta 2006 pp 142 143 Simon 2012 pp 95 99 Spencer C Olin California s Prodigal Sons Hiram Johnson and the Progressives 1911 1917 1968 pp 152 155 Henretta 2006 p 144 Simon 2012 p 104 Simon 2012 p 115 Simon 2012 pp 106 108 Simon 2012 pp 115 116 Simon 2012 pp 116 117 Simon 2012 pp 121 122 Simon 2012 pp 122 123 a b Simon 2012 p 132 Simon 2012 pp 151 152 Simon 2012 pp 150 1511 Trani amp Wilson pp 109 110 Trani amp Wilson pp 142 145 Toward an Entangling Alliance American Isolationism Internationalism and Europe 1901 1950 Archived November 8 2021 at the Wayback Machine Ronald E Powaski Greenwood Press 1991 Simon 2012 pp 150 151 Simon 2012 pp 152 153 Simon 2012 pp 164 165 Simon 2012 pp 154 156 Simon 2012 pp 156 158 Simon 2012 pp 159 161 Simon 2012 pp 163 164 Charles Evans Hughes by Merlo J Pusey Simon 2012 pp 162 163 Simon 2012 p 165 Simon 2012 pp 172 174 176 Charles Evans Hughes People Department History Office of the Historian history state gov United States Department of State Retrieved September 24 2022 Abraham 2008 pp 156 157 Simon 2012 pp 174 175 Shesol 2010 pp 27 28 Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1187 1188 Wittes 2006 p 50 Shesol 2010 pp 24 25 30 Simon 2012 pp 193 195 a b c McMillion Barry J Rutkus Denis Steven July 6 2018 Supreme Court Nominations 1789 to 2017 Actions by the Senate the Judiciary Committee and the President PDF Washington D C Congressional Research Service Archived PDF from the original on November 3 2021 Retrieved March 9 2022 TO RECOMMIT TO THE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY THE NOMINATION Senate Vote 174 Feb 13 1930 GovTrack us Retrieved March 13 2022 Abraham 2008 pp 157 158 Parrish 2002 p 10 Simon 2012 p 194 Parrish 2002 pp 11 12 Simon 2012 pp 200 201 Simon 2012 pp 181 186 246 a b c Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1188 1189 Shesol 2010 pp 30 31 Henretta 2006 p 149 Simon 2012 pp 194 195 Simon 2012 p 186 Shesol 2010 p 37 a b Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1189 1192 Simon 2012 pp 254 257 Simon 2012 pp 246 247 a b c Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1192 1193 Simon 2012 pp 257 258 Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1193 1194 Simon 2012 pp 273 274 282 Leuchtenburg 2005 p 1195 Simon 2012 pp 289 291 Simon 2012 p 303 Simon 2012 p 298 Simon 2012 p 306 Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1196 1197 Simon 2012 pp 316 318 Shesol 2010 pp 394 397 Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1196 1198 Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1198 1199 a b Kalman 2005 pp 1052 1053 Simon 2012 pp 325 327 McKenna 2002 p 419 Kalman 2005 p 1054 McKenna 2002 pp 412 413 McKenna 2002 p 414 Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1198 1200 Leuchtenburg 2005 pp 1200 1201 Simon 2012 pp 334 336 Kalman 2005 p 1057 Simon 2012 pp 345 347 Simon 2012 p 357 Simon 2012 pp 363 364 Simon 2012 pp 357 358 364 Simon 2012 p 375 Ross 2007 pp 141 142 Ross 2007 pp 150 151 Simon 2012 pp 358 359 Simon 2012 pp 373 374 Simon 2012 pp 374 376 Simon 2012 pp 382 386 Simon 2012 p 387 Simon 2012 pp 387 388 Simon 2012 pp 388 389 Christensen George A 1983 Here Lies the Supreme Court Gravesites of the Justices Yearbook Supreme Court Historical Society Archived from the original on September 3 2005 Retrieved November 24 2013 Dexter Perkins Charles Evans Hughes in John A Garraty ed Unforgettable Americans 1960 p 309 Edward Mihalkanin ed American Statesmen Secretaries of State from John Jay to Colin Powell 2004 p 257 Charles Evans Hughes Issue Smithsonian national Postal Museum Archived from the original on December 5 2013 Retrieved November 24 2013 Warren Earl Winter 1965 Comments on the Dedication of the Charles Evans Hughes Residence Center Cornell Law Review 50 2 S2CID 153207205 Works cited edit Abraham Henry Julian 2008 Justices Presidents and Senators A History of the U S Supreme Court Appointments from Washington to Bush II Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780742558953 Henretta James A 2006 Charles Evans Hughes and the Strange Death of Liberal America University of Illinois Law and History Review 24 1 115 171 doi 10 1017 S0738248000002285 JSTOR 27641353 S2CID 145114078 Kalman Laura 2005 The Constitution the Supreme Court and the New Deal The American Historical Review 110 4 1052 1080 doi 10 1086 ahr 110 4 1052 JSTOR 10 1086 ahr 110 4 1052 Leuchtenburg William E 2005 Charles Evans Hughes The Center Holds North Carolina Law Review 83 5 1187 1204 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved November 8 2021 McKenna Marian C 2002 Franklin Roosevelt and the Great Constitutional War The Court packing Crisis of 1937 Fordham University Press ISBN 978 0 8232 2154 7 Parrish Michael E 2002 The Hughes Court Justices Rulings and Legacy ABC CLIO ISBN 9781576071977 Ross William G 2007 The Chief Justiceship of Charles Evans Hughes 1930 1941 Columbia SC University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1570036798 Shesol Jeff 2010 Supreme Power Franklin Roosevelt vs the Supreme Court W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0393064742 Shoemaker Rebecca S 2004 The White Court Justices Rulings and Legacy ABC CLIO ISBN 9781576079737 Simon James F 2012 FDR and Chief Justice Hughes The President the Supreme Court and the Epic Battle Over the New Deal Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1416573289 Trani Eugene P Wilson David L 1977 The Presidency of Warren G Harding American Presidency The Regents Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0152 3 Wesser Robert F 1967 Charles Evans Hughes Politics and Reform in New York 1905 1910 Cornell University Press ISBN 9781501711688 Wittes Benjamin 2006 Confirmation Wars Preserving Independent Courts in Angry Times Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 5144 2 Archived from the original on October 3 2015 Retrieved June 16 2015 Further reading editCostigliola Frank 1976 The United States and the Reconstruction of Germany in the 1920s The Business History Review 50 4 477 502 doi 10 2307 3113137 JSTOR 3113137 S2CID 155602870 Cushman Barry February 1994 Rethinking the New Deal Court Virginia Law Review 80 1 201 61 doi 10 2307 1073597 JSTOR 1073597 Cushman Clare 2001 The Supreme Court Justices Illustrated Biographies 1789 1995 2nd ed Congressional Quarterly Books 2001 ISBN 978 1 56802 126 3 Ernst Daniel R 2014 Tocqueville s Nightmare The Administrative State Emerges in America 1900 1940 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199920860 Ferrell Robert H 1998 The Presidency of Calvin Coolidge University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0892 8 Frank John P 1995 Friedman Leon Israel Fred L eds The Justices of the United States Supreme Court Their Lives and Major Opinions Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 978 0 7910 1377 9 Glad Betty 1966 Charles Evans Hughes and the Illusions of Innocence A study in American diplomacy University of Illinois Press OCLC 456602 Gould Lewis L 2016 The First Modern Clash over Federal Power Wilson versus Hughes in the Presidential Election of 1916 University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700622801 Hall Kermit L ed 2005 The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195176612 Hendel Samuel 1968 1951 Charles Evans Hughes and the Supreme Court Russell amp Russell OCLC 436337 Henretta James A Charles Evans Hughes and the strange death of liberal America Law and History Review 24 1 2006 115 171 Martin Fenton S Goehlert Robert U 1990 The U S Supreme Court A Bibliography CQ Press ISBN 978 0871875549 McCormik Richard L 1978 Prelude to Progressivism The Transformation of New York State Politics 1890 1910 New York History 59 3 253 276 JSTOR 23169744 Perkins Dexter 1956 Charles Evans Hughes and American Democratic Statesmanship Greenwood Press ISBN 9780313204630 Pusey Merlo J 1951 Charles Evans Hughes Macmillan OCLC 14246796 Two volumes The standard scholarly biography Shaw Stephen K William D Pederson and Michael R Williams Franklin D Roosevelt and the transformation of the Supreme Court Routledge 2015 Sibley Katherine A S ed 2014 A Companion to Warren G Harding Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781118834473 Urofsky Melvin I 1994 The Supreme Court Justices A Biographical Dictionary Garland Publishing ISBN 978 0 8153 1176 8 Primary sources edit Hughes Charles Evans Addresses and papers of Charles Evans Hughes governor of New York 1906 1908 GP Putnam s Sons 1908 online Hughes Charles Evans Addresses of Charles Evans Hughes 1906 1916 GP Putnam s sons 1916 online Hughes Charles Evans 1973 The Autobiographical Notes of Charles Evans Hughes Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674053250 External links editCharles Evans Hughes at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata The Hughes Court at Supreme Court Historical Society Charles Evans Hughes Presidential Contender from C SPAN s The Contenders Judge Manuscript Information Charles Evans Hughes List of archives with documents via Judges of the United States Courts Retrieved April 15 2005 Archives at the Supreme Court Historical Society Addresses of Charles Evans Hughes 1906 1916 with an introduction Finding aid to Charles Evans Hughes papers at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Party political officesPreceded byFrank Higgins Republican nominee for Governor of New York1906 1908 Succeeded byHenry StimsonPreceded byWilliam Taft Republican nominee for President of the United States1916 Succeeded byWarren HardingPolitical officesPreceded byFrank Higgins Governor of New York1907 1910 Succeeded byHorace WhitePreceded byBainbridge Colby United States Secretary of State1921 1925 Succeeded byFrank KelloggLegal officesPreceded byDavid Brewer Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States1910 1916 Succeeded byJohn ClarkePreceded byWilliam Taft Chief Justice of the United States1930 1941 Succeeded byHarlan StoneNon profit organization positionsPreceded byLawson Purdy President of the National Municipal League1919 1921 Succeeded byHenry M WaiteAwards and achievementsPreceded byAlfonso XIII of Spain Cover of TimeDecember 29 1924 Succeeded byJuan Belmonte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Evans Hughes amp oldid 1190375583, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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