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David Davis (Supreme Court justice)

David Davis (March 9, 1815 – June 26, 1886) was an American politician and jurist who was a U.S. senator from Illinois and associate justice of the United States Supreme Court. He also served as Abraham Lincoln's campaign manager at the 1860 Republican National Convention, engineering Lincoln's successful nomination for president by that party.

David Davis
Davis as a United States Supreme Court justice, c. 1877
President pro tempore of the United States Senate
In office
October 13, 1881 – March 3, 1883
Preceded byThomas F. Bayard Sr.
Succeeded byGeorge F. Edmunds
United States Senator
from Illinois
In office
March 4, 1877 – March 4, 1883
Preceded byJohn Logan
Succeeded byShelby Cullom
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
In office
December 10, 1862 – March 4, 1877
Nominated byAbraham Lincoln
Preceded byJohn Campbell
Succeeded byJohn Harlan
Personal details
Born(1815-03-09)March 9, 1815
Cecil County, Maryland, U.S.
DiedJune 26, 1886(1886-06-26) (aged 71)
Bloomington, Illinois, U.S.
Political partyWhig (Before 1854)
Republican (1854–1870)
Liberal Republican (1870–1872)
Independent (1872–1886)
SpouseSarah Woodruff Walker (1838–1879)
RelationsDavid Davis IV (great-grandson)
Children2
EducationKenyon College (BA)
Yale University (LLB)
Signature

Of wealthy Maryland birth, Davis was educated at Kenyon College and Yale University, before settling in Bloomington, Illinois in the 1830s, where he practiced law. He served in the Illinois legislature and as a delegate to the state constitutional convention before becoming a state judge in 1848. Shortly after Lincoln won the presidency he appointed the determinedly independent Davis to the United States Supreme Court, where he served until 1877. Davis wrote the majority opinion in Ex parte Milligan, a significant judicial decision limiting the military's power to try civilians in its courts. After being nominated for President by the Labor Reform party in 1872 he pursued the Liberal Republican Party's nomination, but was defeated at the convention by Horace Greeley; despite this, he received one electoral vote in the 1872 presidential election.

Davis was a pivotal figure in Congress's establishment of the 1876 Electoral Commission charged with resolving the disputed Hayes v. Tilden presidential election; he was widely expected to serve as the deciding member of the Commission, but after the Democratic-controlled Illinois State Legislature sought to influence his vote by electing him to the U.S. Senate, Davis excused himself from the Commission and resigned from the Supreme Court to take the Senate appointment. A Republican was appointed in his place, handing the election to Rutherford B. Hayes.

In regard for his independence, he was elected president pro tempore of the United States Senate from 1881 to 1883, placing him first in the line of presidential succession due to a vacancy in the office of the Vice President of the United States following the 1881 assassination of President Garfield. He did not seek re-election in 1882, choosing to retire from public life at the end of his term in 1883.

Early life

David Davis was born to a wealthy family in Cecil County, Maryland, where he attended public school. After graduating from Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, in 1832, he went on to study law in Massachusetts[1] and at Yale University.

Career

Lawyer, legislator, politician, state circuit judge

 
David Davis (circa 1855-1865)

Upon his graduation from Yale in 1835, Davis moved to Bloomington, Illinois, to practice law. Davis served as a member of the Illinois House of Representatives in 1845 and a delegate to the Illinois constitutional convention in McLean County, 1847. From 1848 to 1862, Davis presided over the court of the Illinois Eighth Circuit, the same circuit where his friend, attorney Abraham Lincoln, was practicing.

Davis was a delegate to the 1860 Republican National Convention in Chicago, serving as Lincoln's campaign manager during the 1860 presidential election and engineering Lincoln's nomination over Ward Hill Lamon and Leonard Swett. After President Lincoln's assassination, Judge Davis was an administrator of his estate.[1]

U.S. Supreme Court

 
Robert Cooper Grier (left) and Davis, associate justices of the United States Supreme Court. Photo taken by Mathew Brady between 1862-1870

On October 17, 1862, Davis received a recess appointment from President Lincoln as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States,[2] to succeed John Archibald Campbell, a Southerner, who had resigned on April 30, 1861, after the outbreak of the Civil War.[3] Formally nominated on December 1, 1862, Davis was confirmed by the United States Senate on December 8, 1862,[2] and took the judicial oath of office on December 10, 1862.[4]

On the Court, Davis became famous for writing one of the most profound decisions in Supreme Court history, Ex parte Milligan (1866). In that decision, the court set aside the death sentence imposed during the Civil War by a military commission upon a civilian, Lambdin P. Milligan. Milligan had been found guilty of inciting insurrection. The Supreme Court held that since the civil courts were operative, the trial of a civilian by a military tribunal was unconstitutional. The opinion denounced arbitrary military power, effectively becoming one of the bulwarks of held notions of American civil liberty.

In Hepburn v. Griswold (1870) he held with the minority of the Supreme Court, which ruled that the acts of Congress making government notes legal tender in payment of debts were unconstitutional.[1] He is the only justice of the Supreme Court with no recorded affiliation to any religious organization.[5][when?]

After refusing calls to become Chief Justice, Davis, a registered independent, was nominated for President by the Labor Reform Convention in February 1872 on a platform that declared, among other things, in favor of a national currency "based on the faith and resources of the nation", and interchangeable with 3.65% bonds of the government, and demanded the establishment of an eight-hour law throughout the country, and the payment of the national debt "without mortgaging the property of the people to enrich capitalists." In answer to the letter informing him of the nomination, Judge Davis said: "Be pleased to thank the convention for the unexpected honor which they have conferred upon me. The chief magistracy of the republic should neither be sought nor declined by any American citizen."[1]

He withdrew from the presidential contest when he failed to receive the Liberal Republican Party nomination, which went to editor Horace Greeley. Greeley died after the popular election and before the return of the electoral vote. One of Greeley's electoral votes went to Davis.

Hayes-Tilden Election Commission

In 1877, Davis narrowly avoided the opportunity to be the only person ever to single-handedly select the President of the United States. In the disputed Presidential election of 1876 between the Republican Rutherford Hayes and the Democrat Samuel Tilden, Congress created a special Electoral Commission to decide to whom to award a total of 20 electoral votes which were disputed from the states of Florida, Louisiana, South Carolina and Oregon. The Commission was to be composed of 15 members: five drawn from the U.S. House of Representatives, five from the U.S. Senate, and five from the U.S. Supreme Court. The majority party in each legislative chamber would get three seats on the Commission, and the minority party would get two. Both parties agreed to this arrangement because it was understood that the Commission would have seven Republicans, seven Democrats, and Davis, who was arguably the most trusted independent in the nation.

According to one historian, "No one, perhaps not even Davis himself, knew which presidential candidate he preferred."[6] Just as the Electoral Commission Bill was passing Congress, the legislature of Illinois elected Davis to the Senate. Democrats in the Illinois Legislature believed that they had purchased Davis's support by voting for him. However, they had made a miscalculation; instead of staying on the Supreme Court so that he could serve on the Commission, he promptly resigned as a Justice, in order to take his Senate seat. Because of this, Davis was unable to assume the spot, always intended for him, as one of the Supreme Court's members of the Commission. His replacement on the Commission was Republican Joseph Philo Bradley, resulting in an 8–7 majority for that party – which in turn awarded each of the 20 disputed electoral votes, and the Presidency, to Hayes by that outcome, 185 electoral votes to 184.

United States Senate

Davis served only a single term as U.S. Senator from Illinois (1877–1883), yet still played a meaningful role in U.S. history.

Upon the assassination of President James A. Garfield in 1881, Vice President Chester Arthur succeeded to the office of president. Per the terms of the Presidential Succession Act of 1792, which was still in effect, any subsequent vacancy of the office during the remaining 3½ years in Garfield's term would be filled by the President pro tempore of the Senate. As the Senate was evenly divided between the parties, this posed the risk of deadlock. To prevent this the independent Senator Davis was elected to preside over the Senate.[7] At the end of his term Davis did not seek re-election, instead retiring to his home in Bloomington.[1]

Personal life

 
The David Davis Mansion, "Clover Lawn", built by Davis 1870-1872 in Bloomington, Illinois and home until his death in 1886

Davis married Sarah Woodruff Walker of Lenox, Massachusetts, in 1838. Two of their children, George and Sallie, survived to adulthood.

Upon his death in 1886, he was interred at Evergreen Cemetery in Bloomington, Illinois. His grave can be found in section G, lot 659.

His home in that city, the David Davis Mansion, is a state historic site. At his death, he was the largest landowner in Illinois, and his estate was worth between four and five million dollars.[citation needed]

His great-grandson was David Davis IV (1906–1978), lawyer and Illinois state senator.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Davis, David" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  2. ^ a b McMillion, Barry J. (January 28, 2022). Supreme Court Nominations, 1789 to 2020: Actions by the Senate, the Judiciary Committee, and the President (PDF) (Report). Washington, D.C.: Congressional Research Service. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
  3. ^ DeSilver, Drew (February 26, 2016). "Long Supreme Court vacancies used to be more common". Washington, D.C.: Pew Research Center. Retrieved May 5, 2022.
  4. ^ "Justices 1789 to Present". Washington, D.C.: Supreme Court of the United States. Retrieved February 17, 2022.
  5. ^ adherents.com
  6. ^ Morris, Roy, Jr. (2003). Fraud Of The Century. Rutherford B. Hayes, Samuel Tilden And The Stolen Election Of 1876. New York: Simon and Schuster.
  7. ^ President pro tempore 2021-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, from the Senate's website; American National Biography, "David Davis"
  8. ^ 'Illinois Blue Book 1965-1966,' Biographical of David Davis, pg. 170-171
General

External links

Legal offices
Preceded by Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
1862–1877
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 2) from Illinois
1877–1883
Served alongside: Richard Oglesby, John Logan
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by President pro tempore of the United States Senate
1881–1883
Succeeded by

david, davis, supreme, court, justice, david, davis, march, 1815, june, 1886, american, politician, jurist, senator, from, illinois, associate, justice, united, states, supreme, court, also, served, abraham, lincoln, campaign, manager, 1860, republican, nation. David Davis March 9 1815 June 26 1886 was an American politician and jurist who was a U S senator from Illinois and associate justice of the United States Supreme Court He also served as Abraham Lincoln s campaign manager at the 1860 Republican National Convention engineering Lincoln s successful nomination for president by that party David DavisDavis as a United States Supreme Court justice c 1877President pro tempore of the United States SenateIn office October 13 1881 March 3 1883Preceded byThomas F Bayard Sr Succeeded byGeorge F EdmundsUnited States Senatorfrom IllinoisIn office March 4 1877 March 4 1883Preceded byJohn LoganSucceeded byShelby CullomAssociate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United StatesIn office December 10 1862 March 4 1877Nominated byAbraham LincolnPreceded byJohn CampbellSucceeded byJohn HarlanPersonal detailsBorn 1815 03 09 March 9 1815Cecil County Maryland U S DiedJune 26 1886 1886 06 26 aged 71 Bloomington Illinois U S Political partyWhig Before 1854 Republican 1854 1870 Liberal Republican 1870 1872 Independent 1872 1886 SpouseSarah Woodruff Walker 1838 1879 RelationsDavid Davis IV great grandson Children2EducationKenyon College BA Yale University LLB SignatureOf wealthy Maryland birth Davis was educated at Kenyon College and Yale University before settling in Bloomington Illinois in the 1830s where he practiced law He served in the Illinois legislature and as a delegate to the state constitutional convention before becoming a state judge in 1848 Shortly after Lincoln won the presidency he appointed the determinedly independent Davis to the United States Supreme Court where he served until 1877 Davis wrote the majority opinion in Ex parte Milligan a significant judicial decision limiting the military s power to try civilians in its courts After being nominated for President by the Labor Reform party in 1872 he pursued the Liberal Republican Party s nomination but was defeated at the convention by Horace Greeley despite this he received one electoral vote in the 1872 presidential election Davis was a pivotal figure in Congress s establishment of the 1876 Electoral Commission charged with resolving the disputed Hayes v Tilden presidential election he was widely expected to serve as the deciding member of the Commission but after the Democratic controlled Illinois State Legislature sought to influence his vote by electing him to the U S Senate Davis excused himself from the Commission and resigned from the Supreme Court to take the Senate appointment A Republican was appointed in his place handing the election to Rutherford B Hayes In regard for his independence he was elected president pro tempore of the United States Senate from 1881 to 1883 placing him first in the line of presidential succession due to a vacancy in the office of the Vice President of the United States following the 1881 assassination of President Garfield He did not seek re election in 1882 choosing to retire from public life at the end of his term in 1883 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Lawyer legislator politician state circuit judge 2 2 U S Supreme Court 2 3 Hayes Tilden Election Commission 2 4 United States Senate 3 Personal life 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEarly life EditDavid Davis was born to a wealthy family in Cecil County Maryland where he attended public school After graduating from Kenyon College in Gambier Ohio in 1832 he went on to study law in Massachusetts 1 and at Yale University Career EditLawyer legislator politician state circuit judge Edit David Davis circa 1855 1865 Upon his graduation from Yale in 1835 Davis moved to Bloomington Illinois to practice law Davis served as a member of the Illinois House of Representatives in 1845 and a delegate to the Illinois constitutional convention in McLean County 1847 From 1848 to 1862 Davis presided over the court of the Illinois Eighth Circuit the same circuit where his friend attorney Abraham Lincoln was practicing Davis was a delegate to the 1860 Republican National Convention in Chicago serving as Lincoln s campaign manager during the 1860 presidential election and engineering Lincoln s nomination over Ward Hill Lamon and Leonard Swett After President Lincoln s assassination Judge Davis was an administrator of his estate 1 U S Supreme Court Edit Robert Cooper Grier left and Davis associate justices of the United States Supreme Court Photo taken by Mathew Brady between 1862 1870 On October 17 1862 Davis received a recess appointment from President Lincoln as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 2 to succeed John Archibald Campbell a Southerner who had resigned on April 30 1861 after the outbreak of the Civil War 3 Formally nominated on December 1 1862 Davis was confirmed by the United States Senate on December 8 1862 2 and took the judicial oath of office on December 10 1862 4 On the Court Davis became famous for writing one of the most profound decisions in Supreme Court history Ex parte Milligan 1866 In that decision the court set aside the death sentence imposed during the Civil War by a military commission upon a civilian Lambdin P Milligan Milligan had been found guilty of inciting insurrection The Supreme Court held that since the civil courts were operative the trial of a civilian by a military tribunal was unconstitutional The opinion denounced arbitrary military power effectively becoming one of the bulwarks of held notions of American civil liberty In Hepburn v Griswold 1870 he held with the minority of the Supreme Court which ruled that the acts of Congress making government notes legal tender in payment of debts were unconstitutional 1 He is the only justice of the Supreme Court with no recorded affiliation to any religious organization 5 when After refusing calls to become Chief Justice Davis a registered independent was nominated for President by the Labor Reform Convention in February 1872 on a platform that declared among other things in favor of a national currency based on the faith and resources of the nation and interchangeable with 3 65 bonds of the government and demanded the establishment of an eight hour law throughout the country and the payment of the national debt without mortgaging the property of the people to enrich capitalists In answer to the letter informing him of the nomination Judge Davis said Be pleased to thank the convention for the unexpected honor which they have conferred upon me The chief magistracy of the republic should neither be sought nor declined by any American citizen 1 He withdrew from the presidential contest when he failed to receive the Liberal Republican Party nomination which went to editor Horace Greeley Greeley died after the popular election and before the return of the electoral vote One of Greeley s electoral votes went to Davis Hayes Tilden Election Commission Edit In 1877 Davis narrowly avoided the opportunity to be the only person ever to single handedly select the President of the United States In the disputed Presidential election of 1876 between the Republican Rutherford Hayes and the Democrat Samuel Tilden Congress created a special Electoral Commission to decide to whom to award a total of 20 electoral votes which were disputed from the states of Florida Louisiana South Carolina and Oregon The Commission was to be composed of 15 members five drawn from the U S House of Representatives five from the U S Senate and five from the U S Supreme Court The majority party in each legislative chamber would get three seats on the Commission and the minority party would get two Both parties agreed to this arrangement because it was understood that the Commission would have seven Republicans seven Democrats and Davis who was arguably the most trusted independent in the nation According to one historian No one perhaps not even Davis himself knew which presidential candidate he preferred 6 Just as the Electoral Commission Bill was passing Congress the legislature of Illinois elected Davis to the Senate Democrats in the Illinois Legislature believed that they had purchased Davis s support by voting for him However they had made a miscalculation instead of staying on the Supreme Court so that he could serve on the Commission he promptly resigned as a Justice in order to take his Senate seat Because of this Davis was unable to assume the spot always intended for him as one of the Supreme Court s members of the Commission His replacement on the Commission was Republican Joseph Philo Bradley resulting in an 8 7 majority for that party which in turn awarded each of the 20 disputed electoral votes and the Presidency to Hayes by that outcome 185 electoral votes to 184 United States Senate Edit Davis served only a single term as U S Senator from Illinois 1877 1883 yet still played a meaningful role in U S history Upon the assassination of President James A Garfield in 1881 Vice President Chester Arthur succeeded to the office of president Per the terms of the Presidential Succession Act of 1792 which was still in effect any subsequent vacancy of the office during the remaining 3 years in Garfield s term would be filled by the President pro tempore of the Senate As the Senate was evenly divided between the parties this posed the risk of deadlock To prevent this the independent Senator Davis was elected to preside over the Senate 7 At the end of his term Davis did not seek re election instead retiring to his home in Bloomington 1 Personal life Edit The David Davis Mansion Clover Lawn built by Davis 1870 1872 in Bloomington Illinois and home until his death in 1886 Davis married Sarah Woodruff Walker of Lenox Massachusetts in 1838 Two of their children George and Sallie survived to adulthood Upon his death in 1886 he was interred at Evergreen Cemetery in Bloomington Illinois His grave can be found in section G lot 659 His home in that city the David Davis Mansion is a state historic site At his death he was the largest landowner in Illinois and his estate was worth between four and five million dollars citation needed His great grandson was David Davis IV 1906 1978 lawyer and Illinois state senator 8 See also EditList of justices of the Supreme Court of the United StatesReferences Edit a b c d e Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1900 Davis David Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton a b McMillion Barry J January 28 2022 Supreme Court Nominations 1789 to 2020 Actions by the Senate the Judiciary Committee and the President PDF Report Washington D C Congressional Research Service Retrieved February 15 2022 DeSilver Drew February 26 2016 Long Supreme Court vacancies used to be more common Washington D C Pew Research Center Retrieved May 5 2022 Justices 1789 to Present Washington D C Supreme Court of the United States Retrieved February 17 2022 Religious Affiliation of the U S Supreme Court adherents com Morris Roy Jr 2003 Fraud Of The Century Rutherford B Hayes Samuel Tilden And The Stolen Election Of 1876 New York Simon and Schuster President pro tempore Archived 2021 01 06 at the Wayback Machine from the Senate s website American National Biography David Davis Illinois Blue Book 1965 1966 Biographical of David Davis pg 170 171 GeneralUnited States Congress David Davis id D000097 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved on 2009 04 08 David Davis at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges a public domain publication of the Federal Judicial Center External links Edit Biography portal David Davis Find a Grave Retrieved 2009 04 08 David Davis Archived 2018 04 14 at the Wayback Machine McLean County Museum of HistoryLegal officesPreceded byJohn Campbell Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States1862 1877 Succeeded byJohn HarlanU S SenatePreceded byJohn Logan U S senator Class 2 from Illinois1877 1883 Served alongside Richard Oglesby John Logan Succeeded byShelby CullomPolitical officesPreceded byThomas Bayard President pro tempore of the United States Senate1881 1883 Succeeded byGeorge Edmunds Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David Davis Supreme Court justice amp oldid 1136682726, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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