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John Marshall

John Marshall (September 24, 1755 – July 6, 1835) was an American statesman, lawyer, and Founding Father who served as the fourth chief justice of the United States from 1801 until his death in 1835. He remains the longest-serving chief justice and fourth-longest serving justice in the history of the U.S. Supreme Court, and is widely regarded as one of the most influential justices ever to serve. Prior to joining the court, Marshall briefly served as both the U.S. secretary of state under President John Adams, and a representative, in the U.S. House of Representatives from Virginia, thereby making him one of the few Americans to serve on all three branches of the United States federal government.

John Marshall
Portrait by Henry Inman, c. 1832
4th Chief Justice of the United States
In office
February 4, 1801 – July 6, 1835[1]
Nominated byJohn Adams
Preceded byOliver Ellsworth
Succeeded byRoger B. Taney
4th United States Secretary of State
In office
June 13, 1800 – March 4, 1801
PresidentJohn Adams
Preceded byTimothy Pickering
Succeeded byJames Madison
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Virginia's 13th district
In office
March 5, 1799 – June 6, 1800
Preceded byJohn Clopton
Succeeded byLittleton Tazewell
Personal details
Born(1755-09-24)September 24, 1755
Germantown, Virginia Colony, British America
DiedJuly 6, 1835(1835-07-06) (aged 79)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Resting placeShockoe Hill Cemetery
Political partyFederalist
SpouseMary Willis Ambler
Children10, including Thomas and Edward
EducationCollege of William & Mary
Signature
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/serviceContinental Army
Years of service1775–1780
RankLieutenant
Captain
Unit3rd Virginia Regiment (1775)
11th Virginia Regiment (1776-80)
Battles/warsAmerican Revolutionary War

Marshall was born in Germantown in the Colony of Virginia in 1755. After the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, he joined the Continental Army, serving in numerous battles. During the later stages of the war, he was admitted to the state bar and won election to the Virginia House of Delegates. Marshall favored the ratification of the U.S. Constitution, and he played a major role in Virginia's ratification of that document. At the request of President Adams, Marshall traveled to France in 1797 to help bring an end to attacks on American shipping. In what became known as the XYZ Affair, the government of France refused to open negotiations unless the United States agreed to pay bribes. After returning to the United States, Marshall won election to the U.S. House of Representatives and emerged as a leader of the Federalist Party in Congress. He was appointed secretary of state in 1800 after a cabinet shake-up, becoming an important figure in the Adams administration.

In 1801, Adams appointed Marshall to the Supreme Court. Marshall quickly emerged as the key figure on the court, due in large part to his personal influence with the other justices. Under his leadership, the court moved away from seriatim opinions, instead issuing a single majority opinion that elucidated a clear rule. The 1803 case of Marbury v. Madison presented the first major case heard by the Marshall Court. In his opinion for the court, Marshall upheld the principle of judicial review, whereby courts could strike down federal and state laws if they conflicted with the Constitution. Marshall's holding avoided direct conflict with the executive branch, which was led by Democratic-Republican President Thomas Jefferson. By establishing the principle of judicial review while avoiding an inter-branch confrontation, Marshall helped implement the principle of separation of powers and cement the position of the American judiciary as an independent and co-equal branch of government.

After 1803, many of the major decisions issued by the Marshall Court confirmed the supremacy of the federal government and the federal Constitution over the states. In Fletcher v. Peck and Dartmouth College v. Woodward, the court invalidated state actions because they violated the Contract Clause. The court's decision in McCulloch v. Maryland upheld the constitutionality of the Second Bank of the United States and established the principle that the states could not tax federal institutions. The cases of Martin v. Hunter's Lessee and Cohens v. Virginia established that the Supreme Court could hear appeals from state courts in both civil and criminal matters. Marshall's opinion in Gibbons v. Ogden established that the Commerce Clause bars states from restricting navigation. In the case of Worcester v. Georgia, Marshall held that the Georgia criminal statute that prohibited non-Native Americans from being present on Native American lands without a license from the state was unconstitutional. John Marshall died of natural causes in 1835, and Andrew Jackson appointed Roger Taney as his successor.

Early years (1755 to 1782) edit

 
Marshall's birthplace monument in Germantown, Virginia
 
Coat of arms of Marshall

Marshall was born on September 24, 1755, in a log cabin in Germantown,[2] a rural community on the Virginia frontier, near present-day Midland, Fauquier County. In the mid-1760s, the Marshalls moved northwest to the present-day site of Markham, Virginia.[3] His parents were Thomas Marshall and Mary Randolph Keith, the granddaughter of politician Thomas Randolph of Tuckahoe and a second cousin of U.S. President Thomas Jefferson. Thomas Marshall was employed in Fauquier County as a surveyor and land agent by Lord Fairfax, which provided him with a substantial income.[4] Nonetheless, John Marshall grew up in a two-room log cabin, which he shared with his parents and several siblings; Marshall was the oldest of fifteen siblings.[3] One of his younger brothers, James Markham Marshall, would briefly serve as a federal judge.

Marshall was a first cousin of U.S. Senator (Ky) Humphrey Marshall and first cousin, three times removed, of General of the Army George C. Marshall.[5][a] He was also a distant cousin of Thomas Jefferson.[9]: 433 

 
The Hollow House

From a young age, Marshall was noted for his good humor and black eyes, which were "strong and penetrating, beaming with intelligence and good nature".[10] With the exception of one year of formal schooling, during which time he befriended future president James Monroe, Marshall did not receive a formal education. Encouraged by his parents, the young Marshall read widely, reading works such as William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England and Alexander Pope's An Essay on Man.[11] He was also tutored by the Reverend James Thomson, a recently ordained deacon from Glasgow, Scotland, who resided with the Marshall family in return for his room and board.[12] Marshall was especially influenced by his father, of whom he wrote, "to his care I am indebted for anything valuable which I may have acquired in my youth. He was my only intelligent companion; and was both a watchful parent and an affectionate friend."[13] Thomas Marshall prospered in his work as a surveyor, and in the 1770s he purchased an estate known as Oak Hill.[14]

After the 1775 Battles of Lexington and Concord, Thomas and John Marshall volunteered for service in the 3rd Virginia Regiment.[15] In 1776, Marshall became a lieutenant in the 11th Virginia Regiment of the Continental Army.[16] During the American Revolutionary War, he served in several battles, including the Battle of Brandywine, and endured the winter at Valley Forge. After he was furloughed in 1780, Marshall began attending the College of William and Mary.[17] Marshall read law under the famous Chancellor George Wythe at the College of William and Mary, and he was admitted to the state bar in 1780.[18] After briefly rejoining the Continental Army, Marshall won election to the Virginia House of Delegates in early 1782.[19]

Early political career (1782 to 1797) edit

Upon joining the House of Delegates, Marshall aligned himself with members of the conservative Tidewater establishment such as James Monroe and Richard Henry Lee. With the backing of his influential father-in-law, Marshall was elected to the Council of State, becoming the youngest individual up to that point to serve on the council.[20] In 1785, Marshall took up the additional office of Recorder of the Richmond City Hustings Court.[21] Meanwhile, Marshall sought to build up his own legal practice, a difficult proposition during a time of economic recession. In 1786, he purchased the law practice of his cousin, Edmund Randolph, after the latter was elected Governor of Virginia. Marshall gained a reputation as a talented attorney practicing in the state capital of Richmond, and he took on a wide array of cases. He represented the heirs of Lord Fairfax in Hite v. Fairfax (1786), an important case involving a large tract of land in the Northern Neck of Virginia.[22]

Under the Articles of Confederation, the United States during the 1780s was a confederation of sovereign states with a weak national government that had little or no effective power to impose tariffs, regulate interstate commerce, or enforce laws.[23] Influenced by Shays' Rebellion and the powerlessness of the Congress of the Confederation, Marshall came to believe in the necessity of a new governing structure that would replace the powerless national government established by the Articles of Confederation.[24] He strongly favored ratification of the new constitution proposed by the Philadelphia Convention, as it provided for a much stronger federal government. Marshall was elected to the 1788 Virginia Ratifying Convention, where he worked with James Madison to convince other delegates to ratify the new constitution.[25] After a long debate, proponents of ratification emerged victorious, as the convention voted 89 to 79 to ratify the constitution.[26]

 
John Marshall's House in Richmond, Virginia

After the United States ratified the Constitution, newly elected President George Washington nominated Marshall as the United States Attorney for Virginia. Though the nomination was confirmed by the Senate, Marshall declined the position, instead choosing to focus on his own law practice.[27] In the early 1790s, the Federalist Party and the Democratic-Republican Party emerged as the country was polarized by issues such as the French Revolutionary Wars and the power of the presidency and the federal government. Marshall aligned with the Federalists, and at Alexander Hamilton's request, he organized a Federalist movement in Virginia to counter the influence of Thomas Jefferson's Democratic-Republicans. Like most other Federalists, Marshall favored neutrality in foreign affairs, high tariffs, a strong executive, and a standing military.[28] In 1795, Washington asked Marshall to accept appointment as the United States Attorney General, but Marshall again declined the offer. He did, however, serve in a variety of roles for the state of Virginia during the 1790s, at one point acting as the state's interim Attorney General.[29]

In 1796, Marshall appeared before the Supreme Court of the United States in Ware v. Hylton, a case involving the validity of a Virginia law that provided for the confiscation of debts owed to British subjects. Marshall argued that the law was a legitimate exercise of the state's power, but the Supreme Court ruled against him, holding that the Treaty of Paris in combination with the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution required the collection, rather than confiscation, of such debts.[30] According to biographer Henry Flanders, Marshall's argument in Ware v. Hylton "elicited great admiration at the time of its delivery, and enlarged the circle of his reputation" despite his defeat in the case.[31]

Adams administration (1797 to 1801) edit

Diplomat edit

Vice President John Adams, a member of the Federalist Party, defeated Jefferson in the 1796 presidential election and sought to continue Washington's policy of neutrality in the French Revolutionary Wars. After Adams took office, France refused to meet with American envoys and began attacking American ships.[32] In 1797, Marshall accepted appointment to a three-member commission to France that also included Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and Elbridge Gerry.[33] The three envoys arrived in France in October 1797, but were granted only a fifteen-minute meeting with French Foreign Minister Talleyrand. After that meeting, the diplomats were met by three of Talleyrand's agents who refused to conduct diplomatic negotiations unless the United States paid enormous bribes to Talleyrand and to the Republic of France.[34] The Americans refused to negotiate on such terms, and Marshall and Pinckney eventually decided to return to the United States.[35] Marshall left France in April 1798 and arrived in the United States two months later, receiving a warm welcome by Federalist members of Congress.[36]

During his time in France, Marshall and the other commissioners had sent secret correspondence to Adams and Secretary of State Timothy Pickering. In April 1798, Congress passed a resolution demanding that the administration reveal the contents of the correspondence. A public outcry ensued when the Adams administration revealed that Talleyrand's agents had demanded bribes; the incident became known as the XYZ Affair.[37] In July 1798, shortly after Marshall's return, Congress imposed an embargo in France, marking the start of an undeclared naval war known as the Quasi-War.[38] Marshall supported most of the measures Congress adopted in the struggle against France, but he disapproved of the Alien and Sedition Acts, four separate laws designed to suppress dissent during the Quasi-War. Marshall published a letter to a local newspaper stating his belief that the laws would likely "create, unnecessarily, discontents and jealousies at a time when our very existence as a nation may depend on our union."[39]

Congressman and Secretary of State edit

After his return from France, Marshall wanted to resume his private practice of law, but in September 1798 former President Washington convinced him to challenge incumbent Democratic-Republican Congressman John Clopton of Virginia's 13th congressional district.[40] Although the Richmond area district favored the Democratic-Republican Party, Marshall won the race, in part due to his conduct during the XYZ Affair and in part due to the support of Patrick Henry.[41] During the campaign, Marshall declined appointment as an associate justice of the Supreme Court, and President Adams instead appointed Marshall's friend, Bushrod Washington.[42] After winning the election, Marshall was sworn into office when the 6th Congress convened in December 1799. He quickly emerged as a leader of the moderate faction of Federalists in Congress.[43] His most notable speech in Congress was related to the case of Thomas Nash (alias Jonathan Robbins), whom the government had extradited to Great Britain on charges of murder. Marshall defended the government's actions, arguing that nothing in the Constitution prevents the United States from extraditing one of its citizens.[41] His speech helped defeat a motion to censure President Adams for the extradition.[44]

In May 1800, President Adams nominated Marshall as Secretary of War, but the president quickly withdrew that nomination and instead nominated Marshall as Secretary of State. Marshall was confirmed by the Senate on May 13 and took office on June 6, 1800.[45] Marshall's appointment as Secretary of State was preceded by a split between Adams and Hamilton, the latter of whom led a faction of Federalists who favored declaring war on France. Adams fired Secretary of State Timothy Pickering, a Hamilton supporter, after Pickering tried to undermine peace negotiations with France.[46] Adams directed Marshall to bring an end to the Quasi-War and settle ongoing disputes with Britain, Spain, and the Barbary States. The position of Secretary of State also held a wide array of domestic responsibilities, including the deliverance of commissions of federal appointments and supervision of the construction of Washington, D.C.[47] In October 1800, the United States and France agreed to the Convention of 1800, which ended the Quasi-War and reestablished commercial relations with France.[48]

Nomination as Chief Justice edit

 
Marshall's Chief Justice nomination

With the Federalists divided between Hamilton and Adams, the Democratic-Republicans emerged victorious in the presidential election of 1800.[49] However, Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr both received 73 electoral votes, throwing the election to the Federalist-controlled House of Representatives.[b] Hamilton asked Marshall to support Jefferson, but Marshall declined to support either candidate.[50]

In the contingent election held to decide whether Jefferson or Burr would become president, each state delegation had a single vote. Under this rule, it turned out that neither party had a majority because some states had split delegations. Over the course of seven days, February 11–17, 1801, the House cast a total of 35 ballots, with Jefferson receiving the votes of eight state delegations each time, one short of the necessary majority of nine. On February 17, on the 36th ballot, Jefferson was elected as president. Burr became vice president.[51] Had the deadlock lasted a couple weeks longer (through March 4 or beyond), Marshall, as Secretary of State, would have become acting president until a choice was made.[52]

After the election, Adams and the lame duck Congress passed what came to be known as the Midnight Judges Act. This legislation made sweeping changes to the federal judiciary, including a reduction in Supreme Court justices from six to five (upon the next vacancy in the court) so as to deny Jefferson an appointment until two vacancies occurred.[53]

In late 1800, Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth resigned due to poor health. Adams nominated former Chief Justice John Jay to once again lead the Supreme Court, but Jay rejected the appointment, partly due to his frustration at the relative lack of power possessed by the judicial branch of the federal government.[54] Jay's letter of rejection arrived on January 20, 1801, less than two months before Jefferson would take office.[55] Upon learning of Jay's rejection, Marshall suggested that Adams elevate Associate Justice William Paterson to chief justice, but Adams rejected the suggestion, instead saying to Marshall, "I believe I must nominate you."[56]

The Senate at first delayed confirming Marshall, as many senators hoped that Adams would choose a different individual to serve as chief justice. According to New Jersey Senator Jonathan Dayton, the Senate finally relented "lest another not so qualified, and more disgusting to the bench, should be substituted, and because it appeared that this gentleman [Marshall] was not privy to his own nomination".[57] Marshall was confirmed by the Senate on January 27, 1801, and took office on February 4. At the request of the president, he continued to serve as Secretary of State until Adams' term expired on March 4.[58] Consequently, Marshall was charged with delivering judicial commissions to the individuals who had been appointed to the positions created by the Midnight Judges Act.[59] Adams would later state that "my gift of John Marshall to the people of the United States was the proudest act of my life."[60]

Chief Justice (1801 to 1835) edit

 
Steel engraving of John Marshall by Alonzo Chappel

The Marshall Court convened for the first time on February 2, 1801, in the Supreme Court Chamber of the Capitol Building. The Court at that time consisted of Chief Justice Marshall and Associate Justices William Cushing, William Paterson, Samuel Chase, Bushrod Washington, and Alfred Moore, each of whom had been appointed by President Washington or President Adams.[61] Prior to 1801, the Supreme Court had been seen as a relatively insignificant institution. Most legal disputes were resolved in state, rather than federal courts. The Court had issued just 63 decisions in its first decades, few of which had made a significant impact, and it had never struck down a federal or state law.[62] During Marshall's 34-year tenure as Chief Justice, the Supreme Court would emerge as an important force in the federal government for the first time, and Marshall himself played a major role in shaping the nation's understanding of constitutional law. The Marshall Court would issue more than 1000 decisions, about half of which were written by Marshall himself.[63] Marshall's leadership of the Supreme Court ensured that the federal government would exercise relatively strong powers, despite the political domination of the Democratic-Republicans after 1800.[64]

Personality, principles, and leadership edit

Soon after becoming chief justice, Marshall changed the manner in which the Supreme Court announced its decisions. Previously, each Justice would author a separate opinion (known as a seriatim opinion) as was done in the Virginia Supreme Court of his day and is still done today in the United Kingdom and Australia. Under Marshall, however, the Supreme Court adopted the practice of handing down a single majority opinion of the Court, allowing it to present a clear rule.[65] The Court met in Washington only two months a year, from the first Monday in February through the second or third week in March. Six months of the year the justices were doing circuit duty in the various states. When the Court was in session in Washington, the justices boarded together in the same rooming house, avoided outside socializing, and discussed each case intently among themselves. Decisions were quickly made, usually in a matter of days. The justices did not have clerks, so they listened closely to the oral arguments, and decided among themselves what the decision should be.[66]

Marshall's opinions were workmanlike and not especially eloquent or subtle. His influence on learned men of the law came from the charismatic force of his personality and his ability to seize upon the key elements of a case and make highly persuasive arguments.[67][68][69] As Oliver Wolcott observed when both he and Marshall served in the Adams administration, Marshall had the knack of "putting his own ideas into the minds of others, unconsciously to them".[70] By 1811, Justices appointed by a Democratic-Republican president had a 5-to-2 majority on the Court, but Marshall retained ideological and personal leadership of the Court.[71] Marshall regularly curbed his own viewpoints, preferring to arrive at decisions by consensus.[72] Only once did he find himself on the losing side in a constitutional case. In that case—Ogden v. Saunders in 1827—Marshall set forth his general principles of constitutional interpretation:[73]

To say that the intention of the instrument must prevail; that this intention must be collected from its words; that its words are to be understood in that sense in which they are generally used by those for whom the instrument was intended; that its provisions are neither to be restricted into insignificance, nor extended to objects not comprehended in them, nor contemplated by its framers—is to repeat what has been already said more at large, and is all that can be necessary.[73]

While Marshall was attentive when listening to oral arguments and often persuaded other justices to adopt his interpretation of the law, he was not widely read in the law, and seldom cited precedents. After the Court came to a decision, he would usually write it up himself. Often he asked Justice Joseph Story, a renowned legal scholar, to do the chores of locating the precedents, saying, "There, Story; that is the law of this case; now go and find the authorities."[74]

Jefferson administration edit

Marbury v. Madison edit

In his role as Secretary of State in the Adams administration, Marshall had failed to deliver commissions to 42 federal justices of the peace before the end of Adams's term. After coming to power, the Jefferson administration refused to deliver about half of these outstanding commissions, effectively preventing those individuals from receiving their appointments even though the Senate had confirmed their nominations. Though the position of justice of the peace was a relatively powerless and low-paying office, one individual whose commission was not delivered, William Marbury, decided to mount a legal challenge against the Jefferson administration. Seeking to have his judicial commission delivered, Marbury filed suit against the sitting Secretary of State, James Madison. The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case of Marbury v. Madison in its 1803 term. Meanwhile, the Democratic-Republicans passed the Judiciary Act of 1802, which effectively repealed the Midnight Judges Act and canceled the Supreme Court's 1802 term.[75][c] They also began impeachment proceedings against federal judge John Pickering, a prominent Federalist; in response, Federalist members of Congress accused the Democratic-Republicans of trying to infringe on the independence of the federal judiciary.[77]

In early February 1803, the Supreme Court held a four-day trial for the case of Marbury v. Madison, though the defendant, James Madison, refused to appear.[78] On February 24, the Supreme Court announced its decision, which biographer Joel Richard Paul describes as "the single most significant constitutional decision issued by any court in American history." The Court held that Madison was legally bound to deliver Marbury's commission, and that Marbury had the right to sue Madison. Yet the Court also held that it could not order Madison to deliver the commission because the Judiciary Act of 1789 had unconstitutionally expanded the Court's original jurisdiction to include writs of mandamus, a type of court order that commands a government official to perform an act they are legally required to perform. Because that portion of the Judiciary Act of 1789 was unconstitutional, the Court held that it did not have original jurisdiction over the case even while simultaneously holding that Madison had violated the law.[79]

Marbury v. Madison was the first case in which the Supreme Court struck down a federal law as unconstitutional and it is most significant for its role in establishing the Supreme Court's power of judicial review, or the power to invalidate laws as unconstitutional. As Marshall put it, "it is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is."[80] By asserting the power of judicial review in a holding that did not require the Jefferson administration to take action, the Court upheld its own powers without coming into direct conflict with a hostile executive branch that likely would not have complied with a court order.[81] Historians mostly agree that the framers of the Constitution did plan for the Supreme Court to have some sort of judicial review, but Marshall made their goals operational.[82] Though many Democratic-Republicans expected a constitutional crisis to arise after the Supreme Court asserted its power of judicial review, the Court upheld the repeal of the Midnight Judges Act in the 1803 case of Stuart v. Laird.[83][d]

Impeachment of Samuel Chase edit

In 1804, the House of Representatives impeached Associate Justice Samuel Chase, alleging that he had shown political bias in his judicial conduct. Many Democratic-Republicans saw the impeachment as a way to intimidate federal judges, many of whom were members of the Federalist Party.[84] As a witness in the Senate's impeachment trial, Marshall defended Chase's actions.[85] In March 1805, the Senate voted to acquit Chase, as several Democratic-Republican senators joined with their Federalist colleagues in refusing to remove Chase.[86] The acquittal helped further establish the independence of the federal judiciary.[87][86] Relations between the Supreme Court and the executive branch improved after 1805, and several proposals to alter the Supreme Court or strip it of jurisdiction were defeated in Congress.[88]

Burr conspiracy trial edit

 
Marshall engraving by Saint-Mémin, 1808

Vice President Aaron Burr was not renominated by his party in the 1804 presidential election and his term as vice president ended in 1805. After leaving office, Burr traveled to the western United States, where he may have entertained plans to establish an independent republic from Mexican or American territories.[89] In 1807, Burr was arrested and charged for treason, and Marshall presided over the subsequent trial. Marshall required Jefferson to turn over his correspondence with General James Wilkinson; Jefferson decided to release the documents, but argued that he was not compelled to do so under the doctrine of executive privilege.[90] During the trial, Marshall ruled that much of the evidence that the government had amassed against Burr was inadmissible; biographer Joel Richard Paul states that Marshall effectively "directed the jury to acquit Burr." After Burr was acquitted, Democratic-Republicans, including President Jefferson, attacked Marshall for his role in the trial.[91]

Fletcher v. Peck edit

In 1795, the state of Georgia had sold much of its western lands to a speculative land company, which then resold much of that land to other speculators, termed "New Yazooists." After a public outcry over the sale, which was achieved through bribery, Georgia rescinded the sale and offered to refund the original purchase price to the New Yazooists. Many of the New Yazooists had paid far more than the original purchase price, and they rejected Georgia's revocation of the sale. Jefferson tried to arrange a compromise by having the federal government purchase the land from Georgia and compensate the New Yazooists, but Congressman John Randolph defeated the compensation bill. The issue remained unresolved, and a case involving the land finally reached the Supreme Court through the 1810 case of Fletcher v. Peck.[92] In March 1810, the Court handed down its unanimous holding, which voided Georgia's repeal of the purchase on the basis of the Constitution's Contract Clause. The Court's ruling held that the original sale of land constituted a contract with the purchasers, and the Contract Clause prohibits states from "impairing the obligations of contracts."[93] Fletcher v. Peck was the first case in which the Supreme Court ruled a state law unconstitutional, though in 1796 the Court had voided a state law as conflicting with the combination of the Constitution together with a treaty.[94]

McCulloch v. Maryland edit

 
The text of the McCulloch v. Maryland decision, handed down March 6, 1819, as recorded in the minutes of the US Supreme Court

In 1816, Congress established the Second Bank of the United States ("national bank") in order to regulate the country's money supply and provide loans to the federal government and businesses. The state of Maryland imposed a tax on the national bank, but James McCulloch, the manager of the national bank's branch in Baltimore, refused to pay the tax. After he was convicted by Maryland's court system, McCulloch appealed to the Supreme Court, and the Court heard the case of McCulloch v. Maryland in 1819. In that case, the state of Maryland challenged the constitutionality of the national bank and asserted that it had the right to tax the national bank.[95] Writing for the Court, Marshall held that Congress had the power to charter the national bank.[96] He laid down the basic theory of implied powers under a written Constitution; intended, as he said "to endure for ages to come, and, consequently, to be adapted to the various crises of human affairs ...." Marshall envisaged a federal government which, although governed by timeless principles, possessed the powers "on which the welfare of a nation essentially depends."[97] "Let the end be legitimate," Marshall wrote, "let it be within the scope of the Constitution, and all means which are appropriate, which are plainly adapted to that end, which are not prohibited but consist with the letter and the spirit of the Constitution, are constitutional."[98]

The Court also held that Maryland could not tax the national bank, asserting that the power to tax is equivalent to "the power to destroy." The Court's decision in McCulloch was, according to Joel Richard Paul, "probably the most controversial decision" handed down by the Marshall Court. Southerners, including Virginia judge Spencer Roane, attacked the decision as an overreach of federal power.[99] In a subsequent case, Osborn v. Bank of the United States, the Court ordered a state official to return seized funds to the national bank. The Osborn case established that the Eleventh Amendment does not grant state officials sovereign immunity when they resist a federal court order.[100]

Cohens v. Virginia edit

Congress established a lottery in the District of Columbia in 1812, and in 1820 two individuals were convicted in Virginia for violating a state law that prohibited selling out-of-state lottery tickets. The defendants, Philip and Mendes Cohen, appealed to the Supreme Court. The Court's subsequent decision in the 1821 case of Cohens v. Virginia established that the Supreme Court could hear appeals from state courts in criminal lawsuits.[e] The Court held that, because Virginia had brought the suit against the defendants, the Eleventh Amendment did not prohibit the case from appearing in federal court.[101]

Gibbons v. Ogden edit

In 1808, Robert R. Livingston and Robert Fulton secured a monopoly from the state of New York for the navigation of steamboats in state waters. Fulton granted a license to Aaron Ogden and Thomas Gibbons to operate steamboats in New York, but the partnership between Ogden and Gibbons collapsed. Gibbons continued to operate steamboats in New York after receiving a federal license to operate steamboats in the waters of any state. In response, Ogden won a judgment in state court that ordered Gibbons to cease operations in the state. Gibbons appealed to the Supreme Court, which heard the case of Gibbons v. Ogden in 1824. Representing Gibbons, Congressman Daniel Webster and Attorney General William Wirt (acting in a non-governmental capacity) argued that Congress had the exclusive power to regulate commerce, while Ogden's attorneys contended that the Constitution did not prohibit states from restricting navigation.[102]

Writing for the Court, Marshall held that navigation constituted a form of commerce and thus could be regulated by Congress. Because New York's monopoly conflicted with a properly issued federal license, the Court struck down the monopoly. However, Marshall did not adopt Webster's argument that Congress had the sole power to regulate commerce.[103] Newspapers in both the Northern states and the Southern states hailed the decision as a blow against monopolies and the restraint of trade.[104]

Jackson administration edit

Marshall personally opposed the presidential candidacy of Andrew Jackson, whom the Chief Justice saw as a dangerous demagogue, and he caused a minor incident during the 1828 presidential campaign when he criticized Jackson's attacks on President John Quincy Adams.[105] After the death of Associate Justice Washington in 1829, Marshall was the last remaining original member of the Marshall Court, and his influence declined as new justices joined the Court.[106] After Jackson took office in 1829, he clashed with the Supreme Court, especially with regards to his administration's policy of Indian removal.[107]

In the 1823 case of Johnson v. McIntosh, the Marshall Court had established the supremacy of the federal government in dealing with Native American tribes.[108] In the late 1820s, the state of Georgia stepped up efforts to assert its control over the Cherokee within state borders, with the ultimate goal of removing the Cherokee from the state. After Georgia passed a law that voided Cherokee laws and denied several rights to the Native Americans, former Attorney General William Wirt sought an injunction to prevent Georgia from exercising sovereignty over the Cherokee. The Supreme Court heard the resulting case of Cherokee Nation v. Georgia in 1831.[109] Writing for the Court, Marshall held that Native American tribes constituted "domestic dependent nations," a new legal status, but he dismissed the case on the basis of standing.[110]

At roughly the same time that the Supreme Court issued its decision in Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, a group of white missionaries living with the Cherokee were arrested by the state of Georgia. The State did so on the basis of an 1830 state law that prohibited white men from living on Native American land without a state license. Among those arrested was Samuel Worcester, who, after being convicted of violating the state law, challenged the constitutionality of the law in federal court. The arrest of the missionaries became a key issue in the 1832 presidential election, and one of the presidential candidates, William Wirt, served as the attorney for the missionaries.[111] On March 3, 1832, Marshall delivered the opinion of the Court in the case of Worcester v. Georgia. The Court's holding overturned the conviction and the state law, holding that the state of Georgia had improperly exercised control over the Cherokee.[112] It is often reported that in response to the Worcester decision President Andrew Jackson declared "John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it!" More reputable sources recognize this as a false quotation.[113] Regardless, Jackson refused to enforce the decision, and Georgia refused to release the missionaries. The situation was finally resolved when the Jackson administration privately convinced Governor Wilson Lumpkin to pardon the missionaries.[114]

Other key cases edit

Marshall established the Charming Betsy principle, a rule of statutory interpretation, in the 1804 case of Murray v. The Charming Betsy. The Charming Betsy principle holds that "an act of Congress ought never to be construed to violate the law of nations if any other possible construction remains."[115] In Martin v. Hunter's Lessee, the Supreme Court held that it had the power to hear appeals from state supreme courts when a federal issue was involved. Marshall recused himself from the case because it stemmed from a dispute over Lord Fairfax's former lands, which Marshall had a financial interest in.[116] In Dartmouth College v. Woodward, the Court held that the protections of the Contract Clause apply to private corporations.[117] In Ogden v. Saunders, Marshall dissented in part and "assented" in part, and the Court upheld a state law that allowed individuals to file bankruptcy. In his separate opinion, Marshall argued that the state bankruptcy law violated the Contract Clause.[118] In Barron v. Baltimore, the Court held that the Bill of Rights was intended to apply only to the federal government, and not to the states.[119] The courts have since incorporated most of the Bill of Rights with respect to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, which was ratified decades after Marshall's death.

Authorship of Washington biography edit

After his appointment to the Supreme Court, Marshall began working on a biography of George Washington. He did so at the request of his close friend, Associate Justice Bushrod Washington, who had inherited the papers of his uncle. Marshall's The Life of George Washington, the first biography about a U.S. president ever published, spanned five volumes and just under one thousand pages. The first two volumes, published in 1804, were poorly received and seen by many as an attack on the Democratic-Republican Party.[120] Nonetheless, historians have often praised the accuracy and well-reasoned judgments of Marshall's biography, while noting his frequent paraphrases of published sources such as William Gordon's 1801 history of the Revolution and the British Annual Register.[121] After completing the revision to his biography of Washington, Marshall prepared an abridgment. In 1833 he wrote, "I have at length completed an abridgment of the Life of Washington for the use of schools. I have endeavored to compress it as much as possible. ... After striking out every thing which in my judgment could be properly excluded the volume will contain at least 400 pages."[122] The Abridgment was not published until 1838, three years after Marshall died.[123]

1829–1830 Virginia Constitutional Convention edit

In 1828, Marshall presided over a convention to promote internal improvements in Virginia. The following year, Marshall was a delegate to the state constitutional convention of 1829–30, where he was again joined by fellow American statesman and loyal Virginians, James Madison and James Monroe, although all were quite old by that time (Madison was 78, Monroe 71, and Marshall 74). Although proposals to reduce the power of the Tidewater region's slave-owning aristocrats compared to growing western population proved controversial,[124] Marshall mainly spoke to promote the necessity of an independent judiciary.[citation needed]

Death edit

 
Marshall's grave

In 1831, the 76-year-old chief justice traveled to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he underwent an operation to remove bladder stones. That December, his wife, Polly, died in Richmond.[125] In early 1835, Marshall again traveled to Philadelphia for medical treatment, where he died on July 6, 1835, at the age of 79, having served as Chief Justice for over 34 years.[126] The Liberty Bell was rung following his death—a widespread story claims that this was when the bell cracked, never to be rung again.[127]

Unbeknownst to Marshall, his eldest son, Thomas, had died only a few days before, killed by the collapse of a chimney during a storm in Baltimore, through which he was passing on his way to be at his dying father's side.[128]

Marshall's body was returned to Richmond and buried next to Polly's in Shockoe Hill Cemetery.[129] The inscription on his tombstone, engraved exactly as he had wished, reads as follows:

John Marshall
Son of Thomas and Mary Marshall
was born September 24, 1755
Intermarried with Mary Willis Ambler
January 3, 1783
Departed this life
the 6th day of July 1835[125]

Marshall was among the last remaining Founding Fathers (a group poetically called the "Last of the Romans"),[130] the last surviving Cabinet member from the John Adams administration and the last Cabinet member to have served in the 18th century. In December 1835, President Andrew Jackson nominated Roger Taney to fill the vacancy for chief justice.[131]

Slavery edit

 
John Marshall and George Wythe, William & Mary Law School

Over the course of his life, Marshall owned hundreds of slaves. During his most influential period as chief justice, through the mid-1820s, he wrote nearly every decision on slavery, creating a jurisprudence that was contemptuous of free blacks and favorable to violators of the federal ban on the African slave trade.[132] Marshall's association with slavery began early. In 1783, his father Thomas Marshall as a wedding present gave John Marshall his first slave, Robin Spurlock, who would remain Marshall's manservant as well as run his Richmond household. Upon Marshall's death, Spurlock would receive a now-seemingly cruel choice of accepting manumission on the condition of emigrating to another state or to Africa (at age 78 and leaving his still-enslaved daughter Agnes) or choosing his master/mistress from among Marshall's children.[133][134]

Early in his career, during the 1790s, Marshall represented slaves pro bono in a few cases, often trying to win the freedom of mixed-race individuals. In possibly his most famous anti-slavery case, Marshall represented Robert Pleasants, who sought to carry out his father's will and emancipate about ninety slaves; Marshall won the case in the Virginia High Court of Chancery, in an opinion written by his teacher George Wythe, but that court's holding was later restricted by the Virginia High Court of Appeals.[135] In 1796, Marshall also personally emancipated Peter, a black man he had purchased.[136] Furthermore, Marshall in 1822 signed an emancipation certificate for Jasper Graham, manumitted by the will of John Graham.[136]

After slave revolts early in the 19th century, Marshall expressed reservations about large-scale emancipation, in part because he feared that a large number of free blacks might rise up in revolution. Moreover, Virginia in 1806 passed a law requiring freed blacks to leave the state. Marshall instead favored sending free blacks to Africa. In 1817 Marshall joined the American Colonization Society (Associate Justice Bushrod Washington being its national President until his death and Clerk of the Supreme Court Elias Caldwell the organization's long-time secretary) to further that goal.[137][138] Marshall purchased a life membership two years later, in 1823 founded the Richmond and Manchester Auxiliary (becoming that branch's president), and in 1834 pledged $5000 when the organization experienced financial problems.[139]

In 1825, as Chief Justice, Marshall wrote an opinion in the case of the captured slave ship Antelope, in which he acknowledged that slavery was against natural law, but upheld the continued enslavement of approximately one-third of the ship's cargo (although the remainder were to be sent to Liberia).[140]

Recent biographer and editor of Marshall's papers Charles F. Hobson noted that multitudes of scholars dating back to Albert Beveridge and Irwin S. Rhodes understated the number of slaves Marshall owned by counting only his household slaves in Richmond,[141] and often ignored even the slaves at "Chickahominy Farm" in Henrico County, which Marshall used as a retreat.[142][143] Moreover, Marshall had received the family's thousand-acre Oak Hill plantation (farmed by enslaved labor) in Fauquier County from his father when Thomas Marshall moved to Kentucky, inherited it in 1802,[144] and in 1819 entrusted its operation to his son Thomas Marshall.

Moreover, in the mid-1790s John Marshall arranged to buy a vast estate from Lord Fairfax's heir Denny Martin, which led to years of litigation in Virginia and federal courts, some by his brother James Marshall, and Marshall even traveled to Europe to secure financing in 1796.[145] Eventually, that led to the Supreme Court's decision in Martin v. Hunter's Lessee (1816), from which Chief Justice Marshall recused himself as an interested party (but which made him wealthy).[146] In fact, Marshall arranged with his longtime friend and Associate Justice Bushrod Washington to edit and publish the late George Washington's papers in order to (re)finance that purchase.[147] Marshall's large family came to own many slaves, even if as Hobson argues Marshall derived his non-judicial income not from farming but by selling often-uncultivated western lands.[148] Research by historian Paul Finkelman revealed that Marshall may have owned hundreds of slaves, and engaged in the buying and selling of slaves throughout his life, although Hobson believes Finkelman overstated Marshall's involvement, confused purchases by relatives of the same name and noted the large gap between Marshall's documented slave purchases (in the 1780s and 1790s), and the 1830s (in which Marshall both drafted and modified his will and sold slaves to pay debts of his late son John Marshall Jr.).[149] Finkelman has repeatedly suggested that Marshall's substantial slave holdings may have influenced him to render judicial decisions in favor of slave owners.[150][151][152][153]

Personal life and family edit

 
Genealogical Chart of the Marshall Family, showing near center, right, at 50.1 "John Marshall Ch. J."

Marshall met Mary "Polly" Ambler, the youngest daughter of state treasurer Jaquelin Ambler, during the Revolutionary War, and soon began courting her.[154] Marshall married Mary (1767–1831) on January 3, 1783, in the home of her cousin, John Ambler. They had 10 children; six of whom survived to adulthood.[125][155] Between the births of son Jaquelin Ambler in 1787 and daughter Mary in 1795, Polly Marshall suffered two miscarriages and lost two infants, which affected her health during the rest of her life.[156] The Marshalls had six children who survived until adulthood: Thomas (who would eventually serve in the Virginia House of Delegates), Jaquelin, Mary, James, and Edward.[157]

 
Oak Hill

Marshall loved his Richmond home, built in 1790,[158] and spent as much time there as possible in quiet contentment.[159][160] After his father's death in 1803, Marshall inherited the Oak Hill estate, where he and his family also spent time.[161] For approximately three months each year, Marshall lived in Washington during the Court's annual term, boarding with Justice Story during his final years at the Ringgold-Carroll House. Marshall also left Virginia for several weeks each year to serve on the circuit court in Raleigh, North Carolina. From 1810 to 1813, he also maintained the D. S. Tavern property in Albemarle County, Virginia.[162]

Marshall was not religious, and although his grandfather was a priest, never formally joined a church. He did not believe Jesus was a divine being,[163] and in some of his opinions referred to a deist "Creator of all things." He was an active Freemason and served as Grand Master of Masons in Virginia in 1794–1795 of the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Ancient, Free, and Accepted Masons of the Commonwealth of Virginia.[164]

While in Richmond, Marshall attended St. John's Church on Church Hill until 1814 when he led the movement to hire Robert Mills as architect of Monumental Church, which was near his home and rebuilt to commemorate 72 people who died in a theater fire. The Marshall family occupied Monumental Church's pew No. 23 and entertained the Marquis de Lafayette there during his visit to Richmond in 1824.[citation needed]

Other notable relatives of Marshall include first cousin U.S. Senator (Ky) Humphrey Marshall,[165] Thomas Francis Marshall,[166] Confederate Army colonel Charles Marshall, and first cousin, three times removed, General of the Army George C. Marshall.[167]

Impact and legacy edit

 
Chief Justice John Marshall by William Wetmore Story, at John Marshall Park in Washington, D.C.
 
Marshall was the subject of a 2005 commemorative silver dollar.

The three chief justices that had preceded Marshall: John Jay, John Rutledge, and Oliver Ellsworth, had left little permanent mark beyond setting up the forms of office. The Supreme Court, like many state supreme courts, was a minor organ of government. In his 34-year tenure, Marshall gave it the energy, weight, and dignity of what many would say[weasel words] is a third co-equal branch of the U.S. government. With his associate justices, especially Joseph Story, William Johnson, and Bushrod Washington, Marshall's Court brought to life the constitutional standards of the new nation.[citation needed]

Marshall used Federalist approaches to build a strong federal government over the opposition of the Jeffersonian Republicans, who wanted stronger state governments.[168] His influential rulings reshaped American government, making the Supreme Court the final arbiter of constitutional interpretation. The Marshall Court struck down an act of Congress in only one case (Marbury v. Madison in 1803) but that established the Court as a center of power that could overrule the Congress, the President, the states, and all lower courts if that is what a fair reading of the Constitution required. He also defended the legal rights of corporations by tying them to the individual rights of the stockholders, thereby ensuring that corporations have the same level of protection for their property as individuals had, and shielding corporations against intrusive state governments.[169]

Many commentators have written concerning Marshall's contributions to the theory and practice of judicial review. Among his strongest followers in the European tradition has been Hans Kelsen for the inclusion of the principle of judicial review in the constitutions of both Czechoslovakia and Austria. In her 2011 book on Hans Kelsen, Sandrine Baume[170] identified John Hart Ely as a significant defender of the "compatibility of judicial review with the very principles of democracy." Baume identified John Hart Ely alongside Dworkin as the foremost defenders of Marshall's principle in recent years, while the opposition to this principle of "compatibility" were identified as Bruce Ackerman[171] and Jeremy Waldron.[172] In contrast to Waldron and Ackerman, Ely and Dworkin were long-time advocates of the principle of defending the Constitution upon the lines of support they saw as strongly associated with enhanced versions of judicial review in the federal government.[citation needed]

Justice Felix Frankfurter wrote of Marshall and his Pulitzer Prize winning biographer Albert J. Beveridge:[173]

Senator Beveridge, in his Life of John Marshall, has shown with new vividness that the Constitution of the United States is not a document whose text was divinely inspired, and whose meaning is to be proclaimed by an anointed priesthood removed from knowledge of the stress of life. It was born of the practical needs of government; it was intended for men in their temporal relations. The deepest significant of Marshall's magistracy is his recognition of the Constitution as a living framework within which the national and the States could freely move through the inevitable growth and changes to be wrought by time and the great inventions.

The University of Virginia placed many volumes of Marshall's papers online as a searchable digital edition.[174] The Library of Congress maintains the John Marshall papers which Senator Albert Beveridge used while compiling his biography of the chief justice a century ago.[175] The Special Collections Research Center at the College of William & Mary holds other John Marshall papers in its Special Collections.[176]

Monuments and memorials edit

Marshall's home in Richmond, Virginia, has been preserved by Preservation Virginia (formerly known as the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities). It is considered to be an important landmark and museum, essential to an understanding of the Chief Justice's life and work.[160] Additionally, his birthplace in Fauquier County, Virginia has been preserved as the John Marshall Birthplace Park.

An engraved portrait of Marshall appears on U.S. paper money on the series 1890 and 1891 treasury notes. These rare notes are in great demand by note collectors today. Also, in 1914, an engraved portrait of Marshall was used as the central vignette on series 1914 $500 federal reserve notes. These notes are also quite scarce. (William McKinley replaced Marshall on the $500 bill in 1928.) Examples of both notes are available for viewing on the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco website.[177][178] Marshall was also featured on a commemorative silver dollar in 2005. In 1955, the United States Postal Service released the 40¢ Liberty Issue postage stamp honoring him.[179]

Chief Justice John Marshall, a bronze statue of Marshall wearing his judicial robes, stands on the ground floor inside the U.S. Supreme Court building. Unveiled in 1884, and initially placed on the west plaza of the U.S. Capitol, it was sculpted by William Wetmore Story. His father, Joseph Story, had served on the Supreme Court with Marshall.[180] Another casting of the statue is located at the north end of John Marshall Park in Washington D.C. (the sculpture The Chess Players, commemorating Marshall's love for the game of chess, is located on the east side of the park),[181] and a third is situated on the grounds of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.[182]

Marshall, Michigan, was named in his honor five years before Marshall's death. It was the first of dozens of communities and counties named for him.[183] Marshall County, Kentucky,[184] Marshall County, Illinois,[185] Marshall County, Indiana,[186] Marshall County, Iowa,[187] and Marshall County, West Virginia,[185] are also named in his honor. Marshall College, named in honor of Chief Justice Marshall, officially opened in 1836. After a merger with Franklin College in 1853, the school was renamed as Franklin and Marshall College and relocated to Lancaster, Pennsylvania.[188] Marshall University,[189] Cleveland–Marshall College of Law,[190] John Marshall Law School (Atlanta),[191] and formerly, the John Marshall Law School (now the University of Illinois Chicago School of Law) are or were also named for Marshall.[190]

 
Marshall on the 1890 $20 Treasury Note, one of 53 people depicted on United States banknotes
 
John Marshall on a Postal Issue of 1894
 
John Marshall 40c stamp, issue of 1958

On May 20, 2021, the former John Marshall Law School in Chicago announced its official change of name to University of Illinois Chicago School of Law, effective July 1.[192] The university board of trustees acknowledged that "newly discovered research",[193] uncovered by historian Paul Finkelman,[194] had revealed that Marshall was a slave trader and owner who practised "pro-slavery jurisprudence", which was deemed inappropriate for the school's namesake.[193]

Numerous elementary, middle/junior high, and high schools around the nation have been named for him.

The John Marshall commemorative dollar was minted in 2005.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Other notable relatives of Marshall include Senator Humphrey Marshall,[6] Thomas Francis Marshall,[7] Confederate Army colonel Charles Marshall, and General of the Army George Marshall.[8]
  2. ^ Prior to the ratification of the Twelfth Amendment in 1804, each member of the Electoral College cast two votes, with no distinction made between votes for president and vice president. In the election of 1800, Jefferson and his ostensible running mate, Burr, each received 73 electoral votes, while Adams finished in third place with 65 votes.
  3. ^ To Marshall's dismay, the Judiciary Act of 1802 also eliminated sixteen circuit court judgeships and reintroduced the requirement that the Supreme Court Justices ride circuit. Marshall rode circuit in Virginia and North Carolina, the busiest judicial circuit in the country at that time.[76]
  4. ^ The Supreme Court would not strike down another federal law until the 1857 case of Dred Scott v. Sandford.[80]
  5. ^ An earlier case, Martin v. Hunter's Lessee, had established that the Court could hear appeals from state courts in civil lawsuits.

References edit

  1. ^ "Justices 1789 to Present". Washington, D.C.: United States Supreme Court. from the original on April 15, 2010. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  2. ^ See here March 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine for maps of where the Marshall land was located within Germantown. Cf. http://www.johnmarshallfoundation.org/john-marshall/historic-landmarks/birth-place-of-john-marshall/ March 28, 2014, at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ a b Paul (2018), pp. 11–12
  4. ^ Smith (1998), pp. 26–27
  5. ^ Paul (2018), p. 246
  6. ^ "Marshall, Humphrey (1760–1841)". Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress 1774 – Present. Washington, D.C.: United States Congress. from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved June 11, 2018.
  7. ^ "Marshall, Thomas Francis (1801–1864)". Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress 1774 – Present. Washington, D.C.: United States Congress. from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved June 11, 2018.
  8. ^ ""Fully the Equal of the Best" George C. Marshall and the Virginia Military Institute" (PDF). Lexington, Virginia: George C. Marshall Foundation. p. 2. (PDF) from the original on April 12, 2019. Retrieved June 11, 2018.
  9. ^ Wood, Gordon S. (2011). Kennedy, David M. (ed.). Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815. The Oxford History of the United States. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-983246-0.
  10. ^ Quoted in Baker (1974), p. 4 and Stites (1981), p. 7.
  11. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 13–14
  12. ^ Smith (1998), p. 35
  13. ^ Smith (1998), p. 22
  14. ^ Paul (2018), p. 11
  15. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 15, 18
  16. ^ John Marshall at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a publication of the Federal Judicial Center.
  17. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 18–19
  18. ^ Smith (1998), pp. 75–82
  19. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 24–25
  20. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 25–26
  21. ^ Smith (1998) p. 105
  22. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 27–29
  23. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 30–31
  24. ^ Paul (2018), p. 34
  25. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 35–38
  26. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 43–44
  27. ^ Paul (2018), p. 45
  28. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 87–94
  29. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 96–99
  30. ^ Smith (1998), p. 157
  31. ^ Flanders (1904), pp. 30–31, 38
  32. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 107–108
  33. ^ McCullough (2001), pp. 486–487
  34. ^ McCullough (2001), p. 495
  35. ^ McCullough (2001), pp. pp. 495–496, 502
  36. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 167, 175–176
  37. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 172–174
  38. ^ Paul (2018), p. 175
  39. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 178–181
  40. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 182–183
  41. ^ a b Smith (1998), pp. 258–259
  42. ^ Paul (2018), p. 184
  43. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 186–187
  44. ^ Paul (2018), p. 192
  45. ^ Smith (1998), pp. 268–286
  46. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 193–194
  47. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 196–198
  48. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 208–209
  49. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 215–218
  50. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 220–221
  51. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 218–221, 227–228
  52. ^ Colvin, Nathan L.; Foley, Edward B. (2010). "The Twelfth Amendment: A Constitutional Ticking Time Bomb". University of Miami Law Review. 64 (2): 475–534. from the original on February 15, 2020. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
  53. ^ Stites (1981), pp. 77–80.
  54. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 221–222
  55. ^ Robarge (2000), p. xvi
  56. ^ Paul (2018), p. 222
  57. ^ Quoted in Stites (1981), p. 80.
  58. ^ Smith, (1998), p. 16
  59. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 225–226
  60. ^ Unger, Harlow Giles (November 16, 2014). "Why Naming John Marshall Chief Justice Was John Adams's "Greatest Gift" to the Nation". History News Network. from the original on February 11, 2017. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
  61. ^ Paul (2018), p. 232
  62. ^ Paul (2018), p. 223
  63. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 3–4
  64. ^ Schwartz (1993), pp. 67–68
  65. ^ FindLaw Supreme Court Center: John Marshall November 21, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  66. ^ White (1991), pp. 157–200
  67. ^ Smith (1998), pp. 351–352, 422, 506
  68. ^ Albert Jeremiah Beveridge (1919), The life of John Marshall, vol. 4, p. 94
  69. ^ Hobson (1996), pp. 15–16, 119–123
  70. ^ George Gibbs (1846), Memoirs of the Administrations of Washington and John Adams, vol. II, p. 350.
  71. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 298–299, 306–308
  72. ^ Fox, John. "Expanding Democracy, Biographies of the Robes: John Marshall". Public Broadcasting Service. from the original on September 23, 2017. Retrieved September 1, 2017..
  73. ^ a b Currie (1992), pp. 152–155
  74. ^ A reliable statement of the quote was recounted by Theophilus Parsons, a law professor who knew Marshall personally. Parsons (August 20, 1870), "Distinguished Lawyers," Albany Law Journal, pp. 126–127 online December 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Historian Edward Corwin garbled the quote to: "Now Story, that is the law; you find the precedents for it," and that incorrect version has been repeated. Edward Corwin (1919), John Marshall and the Constitution: a chronicle of the Supreme Court. p. 119.
  75. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 243–247
  76. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 246–247, 250
  77. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 251–252
  78. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 252–253
  79. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 255–257
  80. ^ a b Paul (2018), p. 257
  81. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 258–259
  82. ^ Gordon S. Wood; ed. by Robert A. Licht (1993), "Judicial Review in the Era of the Founding" in Is the Supreme Court the guardian of the Constitution?, pp. 153–166
  83. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 260–261
  84. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 276–277
  85. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 279–280
  86. ^ a b "Senate Prepares for Impeachment Trial". United States Senate. from the original on March 8, 2018. Retrieved September 12, 2018.
  87. ^ Greenhouse, Linda (April 10, 1996). "Rehnquist Joins Fray on Rulings, Defending Judicial Independence". The New York Times. from the original on May 11, 2011. Retrieved October 31, 2009. the 1805 Senate trial of Justice Samuel Chase, who had been impeached by the House of Representatives … This decision by the Senate was enormously important in securing the kind of judicial independence contemplated by Article III" of the Constitution, Chief Justice Rehnquist said
  88. ^ Hobson (2006), pp. 1430–1431, 1434–1435
  89. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 282–283
  90. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 291–292
  91. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 293–295
  92. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 300–303
  93. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 304–305
  94. ^ Currie (1992), p. 136
  95. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 339–341
  96. ^ Paul (2018), p. 341
  97. ^ Edward Samuel Corwin (1919), John Marshall and the Constitution: a chronicle of the Supreme Court, p. 133
  98. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 341–342
  99. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 342–344
  100. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 344–345
  101. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 345–346
  102. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 365–367
  103. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 368–370
  104. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 370–371
  105. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 386–387
  106. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 410–412
  107. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 388–389, 396–397
  108. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 399–405
  109. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 412–413
  110. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 414–416
  111. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 419–420
  112. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 421–423
  113. ^ Boller, Paul F.; John H. George (1989). They Never Said It: A Book of False Quotes, Misquotes, & False Attributions. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-19-506469-8. from the original on October 29, 2017. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
  114. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 423–425
  115. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 267–270
  116. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 335–338
  117. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 375–380
  118. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 382–383
  119. ^ Hobson (2006), p. 1437
  120. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 247–250
  121. ^ Foran, William A (October 1937). "John Marshall as a Historian". American Historical Review. 43 (1): 51–64. doi:10.2307/1840187. JSTOR 1840187..
  122. ^ "Note". Online Library of Liberty. from the original on January 11, 2011. Retrieved January 15, 2010..
  123. ^ Marshall, John. "Abridgment". Cary & Lea. from the original on August 6, 2010. Retrieved January 15, 2010.
  124. ^ "1830 Virginia Constitution". www.wvculture.org. from the original on September 26, 2006. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  125. ^ a b c "Determining the Facts, Reading 3: A Locket and a Strand of Hair—Symbols of Love and Family". Teaching with Historic Places: "The Great Chief Justice" at Home. Washington, D.C.: National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. from the original on May 15, 2017. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  126. ^ Smith. John Marshall. p. 523.
  127. ^ "John Marshall Biography: Supreme Court Justice (1755–1835)". www.biography.com. A&E Television Networks. from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved June 11, 2018.
  128. ^ Thayer, James Bradley, "John Marshall," The Atlantic Monthly, March 1901 (retrieved Dec. 18, 2022).
  129. ^ Christensen, George A. . Yearbook 1983 Supreme Court Historical Society. Washington, D.C.: Supreme Court Historical Society (1983): 17–30. Archived from the original on September 3, 2005. Retrieved June 5, 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  130. ^ Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth; Genovese, Eugene D. (2005). The Mind of the Master Class: History and Faith in the Southern Slaveholders' Worldview. Cambridge University Press. p. 278. ISBN 9780521850650. from the original on December 31, 2016. Retrieved June 12, 2018.
  131. ^ "Nominations". Washington, D.C.: Office of the Secretary, United States Senate. from the original on April 7, 2019. Retrieved June 11, 2018.
  132. ^ Finkelman, Paul (August 31, 2020). "Master John Marshall and the Problem of Slavery". lawreviewblog.uchicago.edu. The University of Chicago Law Review Online. Retrieved March 7, 2023.
  133. ^ Frances Howell Rudko, "Pause at the Rubicon, John Marshall and Emancipation: Reparations in the early national period", 35 John Marshall Law Review 75, 77-78 (2001)
  134. ^ Last Will and Testament, partial transcribed manuscript at Library of Virginia, original having been lost during the Richmond fire set during the Confederate retreat, but portions having been transcribed during an Alexandria Virginia court case.
  135. ^ Rudko, p. 81 et seq.
  136. ^ a b Rudko at p. 78
  137. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 46–48
  138. ^ Paul (2018), pp. 49–51
  139. ^ Rudko p. 84
  140. ^ Bryant, Jonathan M., Dark Places of the Earth: The Voyage of the Slave Ship Antelope (Liveright, 2015) pp. 227–239. ISBN 978-0871406750
  141. ^ Charles F. Hobson, Review Essay: Paul Finkelman's Supreme Injustice, 43 J. S.Ct. History pp. 363, 365-367(2018)
  142. ^ Henrico County erected a historical marker in 2005 https://ww.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=20730[permanent dead link]
  143. ^ The Marshall dwelling having been destroyed before the American Civil War, trenches were dug on the property in 1862. The current historic house/event center was built in 1918 and it and surrounding gardens are now a park. https://henrico.us/rec/places/armour-house/ July 20, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  144. ^ Moving his household there according to Paul (2018) p.
  145. ^ Paul (2018) p.
  146. ^ "The Founders and the Pursuit of Land". from the original on August 12, 2021. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  147. ^ Lawrence B. Custer, "Bushrod Washington and John Marshall: a preliminary inquiry" 4 Am.J. Legal Hist. 34, 43 (1960)
  148. ^ Hobson pp. 368-369
  149. ^ Hobson p. 66
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  153. ^ "America's 'Great Chief Justice' Was an Unrepentant Slaveholder". www.msn.com. from the original on August 17, 2021. Retrieved June 15, 2021.
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  159. ^ "National Park Service, Marshall's Richmond home".
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  181. ^ Goode, James M; Seferlis, Clift A (2008). Washington sculpture : a cultural history of outdoor sculpture in the nation's capital. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0801888106. OCLC 183610465.
  182. ^ Waite, Morrison Remick; Rawle, William Henry; Association, Philadelphia Bar (1884). Exercises at the ceremony of unveiling the statue of John by Morrison Remick Waite, William Henry Rawle, Philadelphia Bar Association. pp. 1, 3, 5, 9, 23–29. from the original on August 15, 2021. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
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  184. ^ The Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society, Volume 1. Kentucky State Historical Society. 1903. p. 36.
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  186. ^ De Witt Clinton Goodrich & Charles Richard Tuttle (1875). An Illustrated History of the State of Indiana. Indiana: R. S. Peale & co. pp. 567.
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  190. ^ a b Newmyer, R. Kent (2001). John Marshall and the Heroic Age of the Supreme Court. LSU Press. p. 477. ISBN 978-0807127018. from the original on August 4, 2020. Retrieved January 26, 2019.
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  194. ^ "Editorial: A law school discounts John Marshall’s positive legacy" July 5, 2021, at the Wayback Machine Chicago Tribune, May 25, 2021. Retrieved May 26, 2021.

Works cited edit

External videos
  Q&A interview with Joel Richard Paul on Without Precedent, October 21, 2018, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Richard Brookhiser on John Marshall: The Man Who Made the Supreme Court, November 27, 2018, C-SPAN
  • Currie, David (1992). The Constitution in the Supreme Court: The First Hundred Years, 1789–1888. University of Chicago. ISBN 978-0-226-13109-2.
  • Finkelman, Paul (2016). CollegeOfLawUsask (November 21, 2016). "Ariel Sallows Lecture presented by Paul Finkelman". Archived from the original on November 3, 2021 – via YouTube.
  • Finkelman, Paul (2018). Supreme Injustice: Slavery in the Nation's Highest Court. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard U.P. ISBN 9780674051218.
  • Flanders, Henry (1904). The Life of John Marshall. T. & J.W. Johnson & Company.
  • Hobson, Charles F. (2006). "Defining the Office: John Marshall as Chief Justice". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 154 (6): 1421–1461. doi:10.2307/40041344. JSTOR 40041344.
  • Hobson, Charles F. (1996). The Great Chief Justice: John Marshall and the Rule of Law. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700607884.
  • McCullough, David (2001). John Adams. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 144. ISBN 978-1-4165-7588-7.
  • Newmyer, R. Kent (2001). John Marshall and the Heroic Age of the Supreme Court. Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-2701-8.
  • Paul, Joel Richard (2018). Without Precedent: Chief Justice John Marshall and His Times. Riverhead Books. ISBN 978-1594488238.
  • Schwartz, Bernard (1993). A History of the Supreme Court. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195080995.
  • Smith, Jean Edward (1998) [1996]. John Marshall: Definer Of A Nation (Reprint ed.). Owl Books. ISBN 978-0-8050-5510-8.
  • Stites, Francis N. (1981). John Marshall Defender of the Constitution. Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-673-39353-1.
  • White, G. Edward (1991). The Marshall Court and Cultural Change, 1815–1835 (Abridged ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195070583.

Further reading edit

Secondary sources 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 978-0742558953.
  • Baker, Leonard (1974). John Marshall: A Life in the Law. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0025063600.
  • Beveridge, Albert J. The Life of John Marshall, in 4 volumes (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1919), winner of the Pulitzer Prize, Volume I, Volume II January 31, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Volume III and Volume IV at Internet Archive.
  • Brookhiser, Richard (2018). John Marshall: The Man Who Made the Supreme Court. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0465096237.
  • Clinton, Robert Lowry (2008). The Marshall Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1576078433.
  • Corwin, Edwin S. (2009) [1919]. John Marshall and the Constitution: A Chronicle of the Supreme Court. Dodo Press. ISBN 978-1409965558. online Edition July 4, 2020, at the Wayback Machine at Project Gutenberg
  • 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.
  • Goldstone, Lawrence (2008). The Activist: John Marshall, Marbury v. Madison, and the Myth of Judicial Review. Walker. ISBN 978-0802714886.
  • Graber, Mark A. (1998). "Federalist or Friends of Adams: The Marshall Court and Party Politics". Studies in American Political Development. 12 (2): 229–266. doi:10.1017/s0898588x98001539. S2CID 146619844. from the original on June 1, 2020. Retrieved July 6, 2019.
  • Johnson, Herbert A. (1998). The Chief Justiceship of John Marshall, 1801-1835. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1570032943.
  • Lossing, Benson John; William Barrit (2005) [1855]. Our countrymen, or, Brief memoirs of eminent Americans. Illustrated by one hundred and three portraits. Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library. ISBN 978-1-4255-4394-5.
  • Martin, Fenton S.; Goehlert, Robert U. (1990). The U.S. Supreme Court: A Bibliography. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Books. ISBN 978-0-87187-554-9.
  • Newmyer, R. Kent (2005). The Supreme Court under Marshall and Taney (2nd ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-0882952413.
  • Paxton, W. M. (William McClung) (March 15, 1885). "The Marshall family, or A genealogical chart of the descendants of John Marshall and Elizabeth Markham, his wife, sketches of individuals and notices of families connected with them". Cincinnati: R. Clarke & Co. – via Internet Archive.
  • Robarge, David Scott (2000). A Chief Justice's Progress: John Marshall from Revolutionary Virginia to the Supreme Court. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0313308581.
  • Rotunda, Ronald D. (2018). John Marshall and the Cases That United the States of America: Beveridge's Abridged Life of John Marshall. Twelve Tables Press. ISBN 978-1946074140.
  • Rudko, Frances H. (1991). John Marshall, Statesman, and Chief Justice. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-27932-4.
  • Shevory, Thomas C. (1994). John Marshall's Law: Interpretation, Ideology, and Interest. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-27932-4.
  • Sloan, Cliff; McKean, David (2009). The Great Decision: Jefferson, Adams, Marshall, and the Battle for the Supreme Court. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1586484262.
  • Simon, James F. (2003). What Kind of Nation: Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, and the Epic Struggle to Create a United States. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0684848716.
  • Strauss, Robert (2021). John Marshall: The Final Founder. Lyons Press. ISBN 978-1493037476.
  • Unger, Harlow Giles (2014). John Marshall: The Chief Justice Who Saved the Nation. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0306822209.
  • White, G. Edward (2001). "Reassessing John Marshall". William and Mary Quarterly. 58 (3): 673–693. doi:10.2307/2674300. JSTOR 2674300.

Primary sources edit

  • Brockenbrough, John W., ed. Reports of Cases Decided by the Honourable John Marshall, late Chief Justice of the United States in the Circuit Court of the United States District of Virginia and North Carolina From 1802 to 1833 Inclusive in Two Volumes, (Philadelphia, 1837) Volume 1 and Volume 2 November 28, 2015, at the Wayback Machine These are Marshall's decisions in the District Court, not the Supreme Court decisions. For United States Supreme Court decisions see below under Cotton and Dillon.
  • Cotton, Joseph Peter Jr., ed., The Constitutional Decisions of John Marshall in two volumes (1905) Vol. 1, Vol. 2 (New York and London).
  • Dickinson, Marquis F., ed. John Marshall: The Tribute of Massachusetts, Being The Addresses Delivered at Boston and Cambridge, February 4, 1901, In Commemoration of The One Hundredth Anniversary of His Elevation to the Bench as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1901.
  • Dillon, John M., ed., John Marshall: The Complete Constitutional Decisions (1903, Chicago)
  • Hobson, Charles F.; Perdue, Susan Holbrook; and Lovelace, Joan S., eds. The Papers of John Marshall published by University of North Carolina Press for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture; the standard scholarly edition; most recent volume: Vol XII: Correspondence, Papers, and Selected Judicial Opinions, January 1831 – July 1835, with Addendum, June 1783 – January 1829. (2006) ISBN 978-0-8078-3019-2.
  • Hobson, Charles F., John Marshall: Writings, Library of America, New York, 2010 (This volume collects 196 documents written between 1779 and 1835, including Marshall's most important judicial opinions, his influential rulings during the Aaron Burr treason trial, speeches, newspaper essays, and revealing letters to friends, fellow judges, and his beloved wife, Polly.) ISBN 978-1-59853-064-3 Table of Contents July 8, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  • Marshall, John. ″The Events of My Life″: An Autobiographical Sketch by John Marshall. Introduction by William H. Rehnquist, Chief Justice of the United States. Edited by Lee C. Bollinger and John C. Dann. Jointly published by Clements Library, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, and Supreme Court Historical Society, Washington, D.C., 2001.
  • Oster, John Edward, ed., The Political and Economic Doctrines of John Marshall (1914, New York)
  • Story, Joseph, Memoir of the Hon. John Marshall, LL.D., Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States In Joseph Story's Miscellaneous Writings, pp. 183–200. An expanded version Character, and Services of Chief Justice John Marshall A Discourse Pronounced October 15, 1835 At the Request of the Suffolk Bar October 17, 2015, at the Wayback Machine in the second edition of Story's Miscellaneous Writings pp. 639–697.
  • Story, Joseph, ed., (1891 – reprint of the 1837 edition) Writings of John Marshall, late Chief Justice of the United States, upon the Federal Constitution, at Internet Archive

External links edit

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Virginia's 13th congressional district

1799–1800
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by United States Secretary of State
1800–1801
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by Chief Justice of the United States
1801–1835
Succeeded by

john, marshall, other, people, named, disambiguation, september, 1755, july, 1835, american, statesman, lawyer, founding, father, served, fourth, chief, justice, united, states, from, 1801, until, death, 1835, remains, longest, serving, chief, justice, fourth,. For other people named John Marshall see John Marshall disambiguation John Marshall September 24 1755 July 6 1835 was an American statesman lawyer and Founding Father who served as the fourth chief justice of the United States from 1801 until his death in 1835 He remains the longest serving chief justice and fourth longest serving justice in the history of the U S Supreme Court and is widely regarded as one of the most influential justices ever to serve Prior to joining the court Marshall briefly served as both the U S secretary of state under President John Adams and a representative in the U S House of Representatives from Virginia thereby making him one of the few Americans to serve on all three branches of the United States federal government John MarshallPortrait by Henry Inman c 18324th Chief Justice of the United StatesIn office February 4 1801 July 6 1835 1 Nominated byJohn AdamsPreceded byOliver EllsworthSucceeded byRoger B Taney4th United States Secretary of StateIn office June 13 1800 March 4 1801PresidentJohn AdamsPreceded byTimothy PickeringSucceeded byJames MadisonMember of the U S House of Representatives from Virginia s 13th districtIn office March 5 1799 June 6 1800Preceded byJohn CloptonSucceeded byLittleton TazewellPersonal detailsBorn 1755 09 24 September 24 1755Germantown Virginia Colony British AmericaDiedJuly 6 1835 1835 07 06 aged 79 Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S Resting placeShockoe Hill CemeteryPolitical partyFederalistSpouseMary Willis AmblerChildren10 including Thomas and EdwardEducationCollege of William amp MarySignatureMilitary serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch serviceContinental ArmyYears of service1775 1780RankLieutenantCaptainUnit3rd Virginia Regiment 1775 11th Virginia Regiment 1776 80 Battles warsAmerican Revolutionary War Battle of Brandywine Battle of Germantown Valley Forge Encampment Battle of Monmouth Siege of CharlestonMarshall was born in Germantown in the Colony of Virginia in 1755 After the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War he joined the Continental Army serving in numerous battles During the later stages of the war he was admitted to the state bar and won election to the Virginia House of Delegates Marshall favored the ratification of the U S Constitution and he played a major role in Virginia s ratification of that document At the request of President Adams Marshall traveled to France in 1797 to help bring an end to attacks on American shipping In what became known as the XYZ Affair the government of France refused to open negotiations unless the United States agreed to pay bribes After returning to the United States Marshall won election to the U S House of Representatives and emerged as a leader of the Federalist Party in Congress He was appointed secretary of state in 1800 after a cabinet shake up becoming an important figure in the Adams administration In 1801 Adams appointed Marshall to the Supreme Court Marshall quickly emerged as the key figure on the court due in large part to his personal influence with the other justices Under his leadership the court moved away from seriatim opinions instead issuing a single majority opinion that elucidated a clear rule The 1803 case of Marbury v Madison presented the first major case heard by the Marshall Court In his opinion for the court Marshall upheld the principle of judicial review whereby courts could strike down federal and state laws if they conflicted with the Constitution Marshall s holding avoided direct conflict with the executive branch which was led by Democratic Republican President Thomas Jefferson By establishing the principle of judicial review while avoiding an inter branch confrontation Marshall helped implement the principle of separation of powers and cement the position of the American judiciary as an independent and co equal branch of government After 1803 many of the major decisions issued by the Marshall Court confirmed the supremacy of the federal government and the federal Constitution over the states In Fletcher v Peck and Dartmouth College v Woodward the court invalidated state actions because they violated the Contract Clause The court s decision in McCulloch v Maryland upheld the constitutionality of the Second Bank of the United States and established the principle that the states could not tax federal institutions The cases of Martin v Hunter s Lessee and Cohens v Virginia established that the Supreme Court could hear appeals from state courts in both civil and criminal matters Marshall s opinion in Gibbons v Ogden established that the Commerce Clause bars states from restricting navigation In the case of Worcester v Georgia Marshall held that the Georgia criminal statute that prohibited non Native Americans from being present on Native American lands without a license from the state was unconstitutional John Marshall died of natural causes in 1835 and Andrew Jackson appointed Roger Taney as his successor Contents 1 Early years 1755 to 1782 2 Early political career 1782 to 1797 3 Adams administration 1797 to 1801 3 1 Diplomat 3 2 Congressman and Secretary of State 3 3 Nomination as Chief Justice 4 Chief Justice 1801 to 1835 4 1 Personality principles and leadership 4 2 Jefferson administration 4 2 1 Marbury v Madison 4 2 2 Impeachment of Samuel Chase 4 2 3 Burr conspiracy trial 4 3 Fletcher v Peck 4 4 McCulloch v Maryland 4 5 Cohens v Virginia 4 6 Gibbons v Ogden 4 7 Jackson administration 4 8 Other key cases 5 Authorship of Washington biography 6 1829 1830 Virginia Constitutional Convention 7 Death 8 Slavery 9 Personal life and family 10 Impact and legacy 11 Monuments and memorials 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 14 1 Works cited 15 Further reading 15 1 Secondary sources 15 2 Primary sources 16 External linksEarly years 1755 to 1782 edit nbsp Marshall s birthplace monument in Germantown Virginia nbsp Coat of arms of MarshallMarshall was born on September 24 1755 in a log cabin in Germantown 2 a rural community on the Virginia frontier near present day Midland Fauquier County In the mid 1760s the Marshalls moved northwest to the present day site of Markham Virginia 3 His parents were Thomas Marshall and Mary Randolph Keith the granddaughter of politician Thomas Randolph of Tuckahoe and a second cousin of U S President Thomas Jefferson Thomas Marshall was employed in Fauquier County as a surveyor and land agent by Lord Fairfax which provided him with a substantial income 4 Nonetheless John Marshall grew up in a two room log cabin which he shared with his parents and several siblings Marshall was the oldest of fifteen siblings 3 One of his younger brothers James Markham Marshall would briefly serve as a federal judge Marshall was a first cousin of U S Senator Ky Humphrey Marshall and first cousin three times removed of General of the Army George C Marshall 5 a He was also a distant cousin of Thomas Jefferson 9 433 nbsp The Hollow HouseFrom a young age Marshall was noted for his good humor and black eyes which were strong and penetrating beaming with intelligence and good nature 10 With the exception of one year of formal schooling during which time he befriended future president James Monroe Marshall did not receive a formal education Encouraged by his parents the young Marshall read widely reading works such as William Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England and Alexander Pope s An Essay on Man 11 He was also tutored by the Reverend James Thomson a recently ordained deacon from Glasgow Scotland who resided with the Marshall family in return for his room and board 12 Marshall was especially influenced by his father of whom he wrote to his care I am indebted for anything valuable which I may have acquired in my youth He was my only intelligent companion and was both a watchful parent and an affectionate friend 13 Thomas Marshall prospered in his work as a surveyor and in the 1770s he purchased an estate known as Oak Hill 14 After the 1775 Battles of Lexington and Concord Thomas and John Marshall volunteered for service in the 3rd Virginia Regiment 15 In 1776 Marshall became a lieutenant in the 11th Virginia Regiment of the Continental Army 16 During the American Revolutionary War he served in several battles including the Battle of Brandywine and endured the winter at Valley Forge After he was furloughed in 1780 Marshall began attending the College of William and Mary 17 Marshall read law under the famous Chancellor George Wythe at the College of William and Mary and he was admitted to the state bar in 1780 18 After briefly rejoining the Continental Army Marshall won election to the Virginia House of Delegates in early 1782 19 Early political career 1782 to 1797 editUpon joining the House of Delegates Marshall aligned himself with members of the conservative Tidewater establishment such as James Monroe and Richard Henry Lee With the backing of his influential father in law Marshall was elected to the Council of State becoming the youngest individual up to that point to serve on the council 20 In 1785 Marshall took up the additional office of Recorder of the Richmond City Hustings Court 21 Meanwhile Marshall sought to build up his own legal practice a difficult proposition during a time of economic recession In 1786 he purchased the law practice of his cousin Edmund Randolph after the latter was elected Governor of Virginia Marshall gained a reputation as a talented attorney practicing in the state capital of Richmond and he took on a wide array of cases He represented the heirs of Lord Fairfax in Hite v Fairfax 1786 an important case involving a large tract of land in the Northern Neck of Virginia 22 Under the Articles of Confederation the United States during the 1780s was a confederation of sovereign states with a weak national government that had little or no effective power to impose tariffs regulate interstate commerce or enforce laws 23 Influenced by Shays Rebellion and the powerlessness of the Congress of the Confederation Marshall came to believe in the necessity of a new governing structure that would replace the powerless national government established by the Articles of Confederation 24 He strongly favored ratification of the new constitution proposed by the Philadelphia Convention as it provided for a much stronger federal government Marshall was elected to the 1788 Virginia Ratifying Convention where he worked with James Madison to convince other delegates to ratify the new constitution 25 After a long debate proponents of ratification emerged victorious as the convention voted 89 to 79 to ratify the constitution 26 nbsp John Marshall s House in Richmond VirginiaAfter the United States ratified the Constitution newly elected President George Washington nominated Marshall as the United States Attorney for Virginia Though the nomination was confirmed by the Senate Marshall declined the position instead choosing to focus on his own law practice 27 In the early 1790s the Federalist Party and the Democratic Republican Party emerged as the country was polarized by issues such as the French Revolutionary Wars and the power of the presidency and the federal government Marshall aligned with the Federalists and at Alexander Hamilton s request he organized a Federalist movement in Virginia to counter the influence of Thomas Jefferson s Democratic Republicans Like most other Federalists Marshall favored neutrality in foreign affairs high tariffs a strong executive and a standing military 28 In 1795 Washington asked Marshall to accept appointment as the United States Attorney General but Marshall again declined the offer He did however serve in a variety of roles for the state of Virginia during the 1790s at one point acting as the state s interim Attorney General 29 In 1796 Marshall appeared before the Supreme Court of the United States in Ware v Hylton a case involving the validity of a Virginia law that provided for the confiscation of debts owed to British subjects Marshall argued that the law was a legitimate exercise of the state s power but the Supreme Court ruled against him holding that the Treaty of Paris in combination with the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution required the collection rather than confiscation of such debts 30 According to biographer Henry Flanders Marshall s argument in Ware v Hylton elicited great admiration at the time of its delivery and enlarged the circle of his reputation despite his defeat in the case 31 Adams administration 1797 to 1801 editFurther information Presidency of John Adams and Federalist Era Diplomat edit Vice President John Adams a member of the Federalist Party defeated Jefferson in the 1796 presidential election and sought to continue Washington s policy of neutrality in the French Revolutionary Wars After Adams took office France refused to meet with American envoys and began attacking American ships 32 In 1797 Marshall accepted appointment to a three member commission to France that also included Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and Elbridge Gerry 33 The three envoys arrived in France in October 1797 but were granted only a fifteen minute meeting with French Foreign Minister Talleyrand After that meeting the diplomats were met by three of Talleyrand s agents who refused to conduct diplomatic negotiations unless the United States paid enormous bribes to Talleyrand and to the Republic of France 34 The Americans refused to negotiate on such terms and Marshall and Pinckney eventually decided to return to the United States 35 Marshall left France in April 1798 and arrived in the United States two months later receiving a warm welcome by Federalist members of Congress 36 During his time in France Marshall and the other commissioners had sent secret correspondence to Adams and Secretary of State Timothy Pickering In April 1798 Congress passed a resolution demanding that the administration reveal the contents of the correspondence A public outcry ensued when the Adams administration revealed that Talleyrand s agents had demanded bribes the incident became known as the XYZ Affair 37 In July 1798 shortly after Marshall s return Congress imposed an embargo in France marking the start of an undeclared naval war known as the Quasi War 38 Marshall supported most of the measures Congress adopted in the struggle against France but he disapproved of the Alien and Sedition Acts four separate laws designed to suppress dissent during the Quasi War Marshall published a letter to a local newspaper stating his belief that the laws would likely create unnecessarily discontents and jealousies at a time when our very existence as a nation may depend on our union 39 Congressman and Secretary of State edit After his return from France Marshall wanted to resume his private practice of law but in September 1798 former President Washington convinced him to challenge incumbent Democratic Republican Congressman John Clopton of Virginia s 13th congressional district 40 Although the Richmond area district favored the Democratic Republican Party Marshall won the race in part due to his conduct during the XYZ Affair and in part due to the support of Patrick Henry 41 During the campaign Marshall declined appointment as an associate justice of the Supreme Court and President Adams instead appointed Marshall s friend Bushrod Washington 42 After winning the election Marshall was sworn into office when the 6th Congress convened in December 1799 He quickly emerged as a leader of the moderate faction of Federalists in Congress 43 His most notable speech in Congress was related to the case of Thomas Nash alias Jonathan Robbins whom the government had extradited to Great Britain on charges of murder Marshall defended the government s actions arguing that nothing in the Constitution prevents the United States from extraditing one of its citizens 41 His speech helped defeat a motion to censure President Adams for the extradition 44 In May 1800 President Adams nominated Marshall as Secretary of War but the president quickly withdrew that nomination and instead nominated Marshall as Secretary of State Marshall was confirmed by the Senate on May 13 and took office on June 6 1800 45 Marshall s appointment as Secretary of State was preceded by a split between Adams and Hamilton the latter of whom led a faction of Federalists who favored declaring war on France Adams fired Secretary of State Timothy Pickering a Hamilton supporter after Pickering tried to undermine peace negotiations with France 46 Adams directed Marshall to bring an end to the Quasi War and settle ongoing disputes with Britain Spain and the Barbary States The position of Secretary of State also held a wide array of domestic responsibilities including the deliverance of commissions of federal appointments and supervision of the construction of Washington D C 47 In October 1800 the United States and France agreed to the Convention of 1800 which ended the Quasi War and reestablished commercial relations with France 48 Nomination as Chief Justice edit nbsp Marshall s Chief Justice nominationWith the Federalists divided between Hamilton and Adams the Democratic Republicans emerged victorious in the presidential election of 1800 49 However Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr both received 73 electoral votes throwing the election to the Federalist controlled House of Representatives b Hamilton asked Marshall to support Jefferson but Marshall declined to support either candidate 50 In the contingent election held to decide whether Jefferson or Burr would become president each state delegation had a single vote Under this rule it turned out that neither party had a majority because some states had split delegations Over the course of seven days February 11 17 1801 the House cast a total of 35 ballots with Jefferson receiving the votes of eight state delegations each time one short of the necessary majority of nine On February 17 on the 36th ballot Jefferson was elected as president Burr became vice president 51 Had the deadlock lasted a couple weeks longer through March 4 or beyond Marshall as Secretary of State would have become acting president until a choice was made 52 After the election Adams and the lame duck Congress passed what came to be known as the Midnight Judges Act This legislation made sweeping changes to the federal judiciary including a reduction in Supreme Court justices from six to five upon the next vacancy in the court so as to deny Jefferson an appointment until two vacancies occurred 53 In late 1800 Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth resigned due to poor health Adams nominated former Chief Justice John Jay to once again lead the Supreme Court but Jay rejected the appointment partly due to his frustration at the relative lack of power possessed by the judicial branch of the federal government 54 Jay s letter of rejection arrived on January 20 1801 less than two months before Jefferson would take office 55 Upon learning of Jay s rejection Marshall suggested that Adams elevate Associate Justice William Paterson to chief justice but Adams rejected the suggestion instead saying to Marshall I believe I must nominate you 56 The Senate at first delayed confirming Marshall as many senators hoped that Adams would choose a different individual to serve as chief justice According to New Jersey Senator Jonathan Dayton the Senate finally relented lest another not so qualified and more disgusting to the bench should be substituted and because it appeared that this gentleman Marshall was not privy to his own nomination 57 Marshall was confirmed by the Senate on January 27 1801 and took office on February 4 At the request of the president he continued to serve as Secretary of State until Adams term expired on March 4 58 Consequently Marshall was charged with delivering judicial commissions to the individuals who had been appointed to the positions created by the Midnight Judges Act 59 Adams would later state that my gift of John Marshall to the people of the United States was the proudest act of my life 60 Chief Justice 1801 to 1835 editFurther information Marshall Court nbsp Steel engraving of John Marshall by Alonzo ChappelThe Marshall Court convened for the first time on February 2 1801 in the Supreme Court Chamber of the Capitol Building The Court at that time consisted of Chief Justice Marshall and Associate Justices William Cushing William Paterson Samuel Chase Bushrod Washington and Alfred Moore each of whom had been appointed by President Washington or President Adams 61 Prior to 1801 the Supreme Court had been seen as a relatively insignificant institution Most legal disputes were resolved in state rather than federal courts The Court had issued just 63 decisions in its first decades few of which had made a significant impact and it had never struck down a federal or state law 62 During Marshall s 34 year tenure as Chief Justice the Supreme Court would emerge as an important force in the federal government for the first time and Marshall himself played a major role in shaping the nation s understanding of constitutional law The Marshall Court would issue more than 1000 decisions about half of which were written by Marshall himself 63 Marshall s leadership of the Supreme Court ensured that the federal government would exercise relatively strong powers despite the political domination of the Democratic Republicans after 1800 64 Personality principles and leadership edit Soon after becoming chief justice Marshall changed the manner in which the Supreme Court announced its decisions Previously each Justice would author a separate opinion known as a seriatim opinion as was done in the Virginia Supreme Court of his day and is still done today in the United Kingdom and Australia Under Marshall however the Supreme Court adopted the practice of handing down a single majority opinion of the Court allowing it to present a clear rule 65 The Court met in Washington only two months a year from the first Monday in February through the second or third week in March Six months of the year the justices were doing circuit duty in the various states When the Court was in session in Washington the justices boarded together in the same rooming house avoided outside socializing and discussed each case intently among themselves Decisions were quickly made usually in a matter of days The justices did not have clerks so they listened closely to the oral arguments and decided among themselves what the decision should be 66 Marshall s opinions were workmanlike and not especially eloquent or subtle His influence on learned men of the law came from the charismatic force of his personality and his ability to seize upon the key elements of a case and make highly persuasive arguments 67 68 69 As Oliver Wolcott observed when both he and Marshall served in the Adams administration Marshall had the knack of putting his own ideas into the minds of others unconsciously to them 70 By 1811 Justices appointed by a Democratic Republican president had a 5 to 2 majority on the Court but Marshall retained ideological and personal leadership of the Court 71 Marshall regularly curbed his own viewpoints preferring to arrive at decisions by consensus 72 Only once did he find himself on the losing side in a constitutional case In that case Ogden v Saunders in 1827 Marshall set forth his general principles of constitutional interpretation 73 To say that the intention of the instrument must prevail that this intention must be collected from its words that its words are to be understood in that sense in which they are generally used by those for whom the instrument was intended that its provisions are neither to be restricted into insignificance nor extended to objects not comprehended in them nor contemplated by its framers is to repeat what has been already said more at large and is all that can be necessary 73 While Marshall was attentive when listening to oral arguments and often persuaded other justices to adopt his interpretation of the law he was not widely read in the law and seldom cited precedents After the Court came to a decision he would usually write it up himself Often he asked Justice Joseph Story a renowned legal scholar to do the chores of locating the precedents saying There Story that is the law of this case now go and find the authorities 74 Jefferson administration edit See also Presidency of Thomas Jefferson Marbury v Madison edit In his role as Secretary of State in the Adams administration Marshall had failed to deliver commissions to 42 federal justices of the peace before the end of Adams s term After coming to power the Jefferson administration refused to deliver about half of these outstanding commissions effectively preventing those individuals from receiving their appointments even though the Senate had confirmed their nominations Though the position of justice of the peace was a relatively powerless and low paying office one individual whose commission was not delivered William Marbury decided to mount a legal challenge against the Jefferson administration Seeking to have his judicial commission delivered Marbury filed suit against the sitting Secretary of State James Madison The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case of Marbury v Madison in its 1803 term Meanwhile the Democratic Republicans passed the Judiciary Act of 1802 which effectively repealed the Midnight Judges Act and canceled the Supreme Court s 1802 term 75 c They also began impeachment proceedings against federal judge John Pickering a prominent Federalist in response Federalist members of Congress accused the Democratic Republicans of trying to infringe on the independence of the federal judiciary 77 In early February 1803 the Supreme Court held a four day trial for the case of Marbury v Madison though the defendant James Madison refused to appear 78 On February 24 the Supreme Court announced its decision which biographer Joel Richard Paul describes as the single most significant constitutional decision issued by any court in American history The Court held that Madison was legally bound to deliver Marbury s commission and that Marbury had the right to sue Madison Yet the Court also held that it could not order Madison to deliver the commission because the Judiciary Act of 1789 had unconstitutionally expanded the Court s original jurisdiction to include writs of mandamus a type of court order that commands a government official to perform an act they are legally required to perform Because that portion of the Judiciary Act of 1789 was unconstitutional the Court held that it did not have original jurisdiction over the case even while simultaneously holding that Madison had violated the law 79 Marbury v Madison was the first case in which the Supreme Court struck down a federal law as unconstitutional and it is most significant for its role in establishing the Supreme Court s power of judicial review or the power to invalidate laws as unconstitutional As Marshall put it it is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is 80 By asserting the power of judicial review in a holding that did not require the Jefferson administration to take action the Court upheld its own powers without coming into direct conflict with a hostile executive branch that likely would not have complied with a court order 81 Historians mostly agree that the framers of the Constitution did plan for the Supreme Court to have some sort of judicial review but Marshall made their goals operational 82 Though many Democratic Republicans expected a constitutional crisis to arise after the Supreme Court asserted its power of judicial review the Court upheld the repeal of the Midnight Judges Act in the 1803 case of Stuart v Laird 83 d Impeachment of Samuel Chase edit In 1804 the House of Representatives impeached Associate Justice Samuel Chase alleging that he had shown political bias in his judicial conduct Many Democratic Republicans saw the impeachment as a way to intimidate federal judges many of whom were members of the Federalist Party 84 As a witness in the Senate s impeachment trial Marshall defended Chase s actions 85 In March 1805 the Senate voted to acquit Chase as several Democratic Republican senators joined with their Federalist colleagues in refusing to remove Chase 86 The acquittal helped further establish the independence of the federal judiciary 87 86 Relations between the Supreme Court and the executive branch improved after 1805 and several proposals to alter the Supreme Court or strip it of jurisdiction were defeated in Congress 88 Burr conspiracy trial edit Further information Burr conspiracy nbsp Marshall engraving by Saint Memin 1808Vice President Aaron Burr was not renominated by his party in the 1804 presidential election and his term as vice president ended in 1805 After leaving office Burr traveled to the western United States where he may have entertained plans to establish an independent republic from Mexican or American territories 89 In 1807 Burr was arrested and charged for treason and Marshall presided over the subsequent trial Marshall required Jefferson to turn over his correspondence with General James Wilkinson Jefferson decided to release the documents but argued that he was not compelled to do so under the doctrine of executive privilege 90 During the trial Marshall ruled that much of the evidence that the government had amassed against Burr was inadmissible biographer Joel Richard Paul states that Marshall effectively directed the jury to acquit Burr After Burr was acquitted Democratic Republicans including President Jefferson attacked Marshall for his role in the trial 91 Fletcher v Peck edit Further information Yazoo land scandal In 1795 the state of Georgia had sold much of its western lands to a speculative land company which then resold much of that land to other speculators termed New Yazooists After a public outcry over the sale which was achieved through bribery Georgia rescinded the sale and offered to refund the original purchase price to the New Yazooists Many of the New Yazooists had paid far more than the original purchase price and they rejected Georgia s revocation of the sale Jefferson tried to arrange a compromise by having the federal government purchase the land from Georgia and compensate the New Yazooists but Congressman John Randolph defeated the compensation bill The issue remained unresolved and a case involving the land finally reached the Supreme Court through the 1810 case of Fletcher v Peck 92 In March 1810 the Court handed down its unanimous holding which voided Georgia s repeal of the purchase on the basis of the Constitution s Contract Clause The Court s ruling held that the original sale of land constituted a contract with the purchasers and the Contract Clause prohibits states from impairing the obligations of contracts 93 Fletcher v Peck was the first case in which the Supreme Court ruled a state law unconstitutional though in 1796 the Court had voided a state law as conflicting with the combination of the Constitution together with a treaty 94 McCulloch v Maryland edit nbsp The text of the McCulloch v Maryland decision handed down March 6 1819 as recorded in the minutes of the US Supreme CourtIn 1816 Congress established the Second Bank of the United States national bank in order to regulate the country s money supply and provide loans to the federal government and businesses The state of Maryland imposed a tax on the national bank but James McCulloch the manager of the national bank s branch in Baltimore refused to pay the tax After he was convicted by Maryland s court system McCulloch appealed to the Supreme Court and the Court heard the case of McCulloch v Maryland in 1819 In that case the state of Maryland challenged the constitutionality of the national bank and asserted that it had the right to tax the national bank 95 Writing for the Court Marshall held that Congress had the power to charter the national bank 96 He laid down the basic theory of implied powers under a written Constitution intended as he said to endure for ages to come and consequently to be adapted to the various crises of human affairs Marshall envisaged a federal government which although governed by timeless principles possessed the powers on which the welfare of a nation essentially depends 97 Let the end be legitimate Marshall wrote let it be within the scope of the Constitution and all means which are appropriate which are plainly adapted to that end which are not prohibited but consist with the letter and the spirit of the Constitution are constitutional 98 The Court also held that Maryland could not tax the national bank asserting that the power to tax is equivalent to the power to destroy The Court s decision in McCulloch was according to Joel Richard Paul probably the most controversial decision handed down by the Marshall Court Southerners including Virginia judge Spencer Roane attacked the decision as an overreach of federal power 99 In a subsequent case Osborn v Bank of the United States the Court ordered a state official to return seized funds to the national bank The Osborn case established that the Eleventh Amendment does not grant state officials sovereign immunity when they resist a federal court order 100 Cohens v Virginia edit Congress established a lottery in the District of Columbia in 1812 and in 1820 two individuals were convicted in Virginia for violating a state law that prohibited selling out of state lottery tickets The defendants Philip and Mendes Cohen appealed to the Supreme Court The Court s subsequent decision in the 1821 case of Cohens v Virginia established that the Supreme Court could hear appeals from state courts in criminal lawsuits e The Court held that because Virginia had brought the suit against the defendants the Eleventh Amendment did not prohibit the case from appearing in federal court 101 Gibbons v Ogden edit In 1808 Robert R Livingston and Robert Fulton secured a monopoly from the state of New York for the navigation of steamboats in state waters Fulton granted a license to Aaron Ogden and Thomas Gibbons to operate steamboats in New York but the partnership between Ogden and Gibbons collapsed Gibbons continued to operate steamboats in New York after receiving a federal license to operate steamboats in the waters of any state In response Ogden won a judgment in state court that ordered Gibbons to cease operations in the state Gibbons appealed to the Supreme Court which heard the case of Gibbons v Ogden in 1824 Representing Gibbons Congressman Daniel Webster and Attorney General William Wirt acting in a non governmental capacity argued that Congress had the exclusive power to regulate commerce while Ogden s attorneys contended that the Constitution did not prohibit states from restricting navigation 102 Writing for the Court Marshall held that navigation constituted a form of commerce and thus could be regulated by Congress Because New York s monopoly conflicted with a properly issued federal license the Court struck down the monopoly However Marshall did not adopt Webster s argument that Congress had the sole power to regulate commerce 103 Newspapers in both the Northern states and the Southern states hailed the decision as a blow against monopolies and the restraint of trade 104 Jackson administration edit See also Presidency of Andrew Jackson Marshall personally opposed the presidential candidacy of Andrew Jackson whom the Chief Justice saw as a dangerous demagogue and he caused a minor incident during the 1828 presidential campaign when he criticized Jackson s attacks on President John Quincy Adams 105 After the death of Associate Justice Washington in 1829 Marshall was the last remaining original member of the Marshall Court and his influence declined as new justices joined the Court 106 After Jackson took office in 1829 he clashed with the Supreme Court especially with regards to his administration s policy of Indian removal 107 In the 1823 case of Johnson v McIntosh the Marshall Court had established the supremacy of the federal government in dealing with Native American tribes 108 In the late 1820s the state of Georgia stepped up efforts to assert its control over the Cherokee within state borders with the ultimate goal of removing the Cherokee from the state After Georgia passed a law that voided Cherokee laws and denied several rights to the Native Americans former Attorney General William Wirt sought an injunction to prevent Georgia from exercising sovereignty over the Cherokee The Supreme Court heard the resulting case of Cherokee Nation v Georgia in 1831 109 Writing for the Court Marshall held that Native American tribes constituted domestic dependent nations a new legal status but he dismissed the case on the basis of standing 110 At roughly the same time that the Supreme Court issued its decision in Cherokee Nation v Georgia a group of white missionaries living with the Cherokee were arrested by the state of Georgia The State did so on the basis of an 1830 state law that prohibited white men from living on Native American land without a state license Among those arrested was Samuel Worcester who after being convicted of violating the state law challenged the constitutionality of the law in federal court The arrest of the missionaries became a key issue in the 1832 presidential election and one of the presidential candidates William Wirt served as the attorney for the missionaries 111 On March 3 1832 Marshall delivered the opinion of the Court in the case of Worcester v Georgia The Court s holding overturned the conviction and the state law holding that the state of Georgia had improperly exercised control over the Cherokee 112 It is often reported that in response to the Worcester decision President Andrew Jackson declared John Marshall has made his decision now let him enforce it More reputable sources recognize this as a false quotation 113 Regardless Jackson refused to enforce the decision and Georgia refused to release the missionaries The situation was finally resolved when the Jackson administration privately convinced Governor Wilson Lumpkin to pardon the missionaries 114 Other key cases edit Marshall established the Charming Betsy principle a rule of statutory interpretation in the 1804 case of Murray v The Charming Betsy The Charming Betsy principle holds that an act of Congress ought never to be construed to violate the law of nations if any other possible construction remains 115 In Martin v Hunter s Lessee the Supreme Court held that it had the power to hear appeals from state supreme courts when a federal issue was involved Marshall recused himself from the case because it stemmed from a dispute over Lord Fairfax s former lands which Marshall had a financial interest in 116 In Dartmouth College v Woodward the Court held that the protections of the Contract Clause apply to private corporations 117 In Ogden v Saunders Marshall dissented in part and assented in part and the Court upheld a state law that allowed individuals to file bankruptcy In his separate opinion Marshall argued that the state bankruptcy law violated the Contract Clause 118 In Barron v Baltimore the Court held that the Bill of Rights was intended to apply only to the federal government and not to the states 119 The courts have since incorporated most of the Bill of Rights with respect to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment which was ratified decades after Marshall s death Authorship of Washington biography editAfter his appointment to the Supreme Court Marshall began working on a biography of George Washington He did so at the request of his close friend Associate Justice Bushrod Washington who had inherited the papers of his uncle Marshall s The Life of George Washington the first biography about a U S president ever published spanned five volumes and just under one thousand pages The first two volumes published in 1804 were poorly received and seen by many as an attack on the Democratic Republican Party 120 Nonetheless historians have often praised the accuracy and well reasoned judgments of Marshall s biography while noting his frequent paraphrases of published sources such as William Gordon s 1801 history of the Revolution and the British Annual Register 121 After completing the revision to his biography of Washington Marshall prepared an abridgment In 1833 he wrote I have at length completed an abridgment of the Life of Washington for the use of schools I have endeavored to compress it as much as possible After striking out every thing which in my judgment could be properly excluded the volume will contain at least 400 pages 122 The Abridgment was not published until 1838 three years after Marshall died 123 1829 1830 Virginia Constitutional Convention editIn 1828 Marshall presided over a convention to promote internal improvements in Virginia The following year Marshall was a delegate to the state constitutional convention of 1829 30 where he was again joined by fellow American statesman and loyal Virginians James Madison and James Monroe although all were quite old by that time Madison was 78 Monroe 71 and Marshall 74 Although proposals to reduce the power of the Tidewater region s slave owning aristocrats compared to growing western population proved controversial 124 Marshall mainly spoke to promote the necessity of an independent judiciary citation needed Death edit nbsp Marshall s graveIn 1831 the 76 year old chief justice traveled to Philadelphia Pennsylvania where he underwent an operation to remove bladder stones That December his wife Polly died in Richmond 125 In early 1835 Marshall again traveled to Philadelphia for medical treatment where he died on July 6 1835 at the age of 79 having served as Chief Justice for over 34 years 126 The Liberty Bell was rung following his death a widespread story claims that this was when the bell cracked never to be rung again 127 Unbeknownst to Marshall his eldest son Thomas had died only a few days before killed by the collapse of a chimney during a storm in Baltimore through which he was passing on his way to be at his dying father s side 128 Marshall s body was returned to Richmond and buried next to Polly s in Shockoe Hill Cemetery 129 The inscription on his tombstone engraved exactly as he had wished reads as follows John MarshallSon of Thomas and Mary Marshallwas born September 24 1755Intermarried with Mary Willis AmblerJanuary 3 1783Departed this lifethe 6th day of July 1835 125 Marshall was among the last remaining Founding Fathers a group poetically called the Last of the Romans 130 the last surviving Cabinet member from the John Adams administration and the last Cabinet member to have served in the 18th century In December 1835 President Andrew Jackson nominated Roger Taney to fill the vacancy for chief justice 131 Slavery edit nbsp John Marshall and George Wythe William amp Mary Law SchoolOver the course of his life Marshall owned hundreds of slaves During his most influential period as chief justice through the mid 1820s he wrote nearly every decision on slavery creating a jurisprudence that was contemptuous of free blacks and favorable to violators of the federal ban on the African slave trade 132 Marshall s association with slavery began early In 1783 his father Thomas Marshall as a wedding present gave John Marshall his first slave Robin Spurlock who would remain Marshall s manservant as well as run his Richmond household Upon Marshall s death Spurlock would receive a now seemingly cruel choice of accepting manumission on the condition of emigrating to another state or to Africa at age 78 and leaving his still enslaved daughter Agnes or choosing his master mistress from among Marshall s children 133 134 Early in his career during the 1790s Marshall represented slaves pro bono in a few cases often trying to win the freedom of mixed race individuals In possibly his most famous anti slavery case Marshall represented Robert Pleasants who sought to carry out his father s will and emancipate about ninety slaves Marshall won the case in the Virginia High Court of Chancery in an opinion written by his teacher George Wythe but that court s holding was later restricted by the Virginia High Court of Appeals 135 In 1796 Marshall also personally emancipated Peter a black man he had purchased 136 Furthermore Marshall in 1822 signed an emancipation certificate for Jasper Graham manumitted by the will of John Graham 136 After slave revolts early in the 19th century Marshall expressed reservations about large scale emancipation in part because he feared that a large number of free blacks might rise up in revolution Moreover Virginia in 1806 passed a law requiring freed blacks to leave the state Marshall instead favored sending free blacks to Africa In 1817 Marshall joined the American Colonization Society Associate Justice Bushrod Washington being its national President until his death and Clerk of the Supreme Court Elias Caldwell the organization s long time secretary to further that goal 137 138 Marshall purchased a life membership two years later in 1823 founded the Richmond and Manchester Auxiliary becoming that branch s president and in 1834 pledged 5000 when the organization experienced financial problems 139 In 1825 as Chief Justice Marshall wrote an opinion in the case of the captured slave ship Antelope in which he acknowledged that slavery was against natural law but upheld the continued enslavement of approximately one third of the ship s cargo although the remainder were to be sent to Liberia 140 Recent biographer and editor of Marshall s papers Charles F Hobson noted that multitudes of scholars dating back to Albert Beveridge and Irwin S Rhodes understated the number of slaves Marshall owned by counting only his household slaves in Richmond 141 and often ignored even the slaves at Chickahominy Farm in Henrico County which Marshall used as a retreat 142 143 Moreover Marshall had received the family s thousand acre Oak Hill plantation farmed by enslaved labor in Fauquier County from his father when Thomas Marshall moved to Kentucky inherited it in 1802 144 and in 1819 entrusted its operation to his son Thomas Marshall Moreover in the mid 1790s John Marshall arranged to buy a vast estate from Lord Fairfax s heir Denny Martin which led to years of litigation in Virginia and federal courts some by his brother James Marshall and Marshall even traveled to Europe to secure financing in 1796 145 Eventually that led to the Supreme Court s decision in Martin v Hunter s Lessee 1816 from which Chief Justice Marshall recused himself as an interested party but which made him wealthy 146 In fact Marshall arranged with his longtime friend and Associate Justice Bushrod Washington to edit and publish the late George Washington s papers in order to re finance that purchase 147 Marshall s large family came to own many slaves even if as Hobson argues Marshall derived his non judicial income not from farming but by selling often uncultivated western lands 148 Research by historian Paul Finkelman revealed that Marshall may have owned hundreds of slaves and engaged in the buying and selling of slaves throughout his life although Hobson believes Finkelman overstated Marshall s involvement confused purchases by relatives of the same name and noted the large gap between Marshall s documented slave purchases in the 1780s and 1790s and the 1830s in which Marshall both drafted and modified his will and sold slaves to pay debts of his late son John Marshall Jr 149 Finkelman has repeatedly suggested that Marshall s substantial slave holdings may have influenced him to render judicial decisions in favor of slave owners 150 151 152 153 Personal life and family edit nbsp Genealogical Chart of the Marshall Family showing near center right at 50 1 John Marshall Ch J Marshall met Mary Polly Ambler the youngest daughter of state treasurer Jaquelin Ambler during the Revolutionary War and soon began courting her 154 Marshall married Mary 1767 1831 on January 3 1783 in the home of her cousin John Ambler They had 10 children six of whom survived to adulthood 125 155 Between the births of son Jaquelin Ambler in 1787 and daughter Mary in 1795 Polly Marshall suffered two miscarriages and lost two infants which affected her health during the rest of her life 156 The Marshalls had six children who survived until adulthood Thomas who would eventually serve in the Virginia House of Delegates Jaquelin Mary James and Edward 157 nbsp Oak HillMarshall loved his Richmond home built in 1790 158 and spent as much time there as possible in quiet contentment 159 160 After his father s death in 1803 Marshall inherited the Oak Hill estate where he and his family also spent time 161 For approximately three months each year Marshall lived in Washington during the Court s annual term boarding with Justice Story during his final years at the Ringgold Carroll House Marshall also left Virginia for several weeks each year to serve on the circuit court in Raleigh North Carolina From 1810 to 1813 he also maintained the D S Tavern property in Albemarle County Virginia 162 Marshall was not religious and although his grandfather was a priest never formally joined a church He did not believe Jesus was a divine being 163 and in some of his opinions referred to a deist Creator of all things He was an active Freemason and served as Grand Master of Masons in Virginia in 1794 1795 of the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of the Commonwealth of Virginia 164 While in Richmond Marshall attended St John s Church on Church Hill until 1814 when he led the movement to hire Robert Mills as architect of Monumental Church which was near his home and rebuilt to commemorate 72 people who died in a theater fire The Marshall family occupied Monumental Church s pew No 23 and entertained the Marquis de Lafayette there during his visit to Richmond in 1824 citation needed Other notable relatives of Marshall include first cousin U S Senator Ky Humphrey Marshall 165 Thomas Francis Marshall 166 Confederate Army colonel Charles Marshall and first cousin three times removed General of the Army George C Marshall 167 Impact and legacy edit nbsp Chief Justice John Marshall by William Wetmore Story at John Marshall Park in Washington D C nbsp Marshall was the subject of a 2005 commemorative silver dollar The three chief justices that had preceded Marshall John Jay John Rutledge and Oliver Ellsworth had left little permanent mark beyond setting up the forms of office The Supreme Court like many state supreme courts was a minor organ of government In his 34 year tenure Marshall gave it the energy weight and dignity of what many would say weasel words is a third co equal branch of the U S government With his associate justices especially Joseph Story William Johnson and Bushrod Washington Marshall s Court brought to life the constitutional standards of the new nation citation needed Marshall used Federalist approaches to build a strong federal government over the opposition of the Jeffersonian Republicans who wanted stronger state governments 168 His influential rulings reshaped American government making the Supreme Court the final arbiter of constitutional interpretation The Marshall Court struck down an act of Congress in only one case Marbury v Madison in 1803 but that established the Court as a center of power that could overrule the Congress the President the states and all lower courts if that is what a fair reading of the Constitution required He also defended the legal rights of corporations by tying them to the individual rights of the stockholders thereby ensuring that corporations have the same level of protection for their property as individuals had and shielding corporations against intrusive state governments 169 Many commentators have written concerning Marshall s contributions to the theory and practice of judicial review Among his strongest followers in the European tradition has been Hans Kelsen for the inclusion of the principle of judicial review in the constitutions of both Czechoslovakia and Austria In her 2011 book on Hans Kelsen Sandrine Baume 170 identified John Hart Ely as a significant defender of the compatibility of judicial review with the very principles of democracy Baume identified John Hart Ely alongside Dworkin as the foremost defenders of Marshall s principle in recent years while the opposition to this principle of compatibility were identified as Bruce Ackerman 171 and Jeremy Waldron 172 In contrast to Waldron and Ackerman Ely and Dworkin were long time advocates of the principle of defending the Constitution upon the lines of support they saw as strongly associated with enhanced versions of judicial review in the federal government citation needed Justice Felix Frankfurter wrote of Marshall and his Pulitzer Prize winning biographer Albert J Beveridge 173 Senator Beveridge in his Life of John Marshall has shown with new vividness that the Constitution of the United States is not a document whose text was divinely inspired and whose meaning is to be proclaimed by an anointed priesthood removed from knowledge of the stress of life It was born of the practical needs of government it was intended for men in their temporal relations The deepest significant of Marshall s magistracy is his recognition of the Constitution as a living framework within which the national and the States could freely move through the inevitable growth and changes to be wrought by time and the great inventions The University of Virginia placed many volumes of Marshall s papers online as a searchable digital edition 174 The Library of Congress maintains the John Marshall papers which Senator Albert Beveridge used while compiling his biography of the chief justice a century ago 175 The Special Collections Research Center at the College of William amp Mary holds other John Marshall papers in its Special Collections 176 Monuments and memorials editMain article List of places and things named for John Marshall Marshall s home in Richmond Virginia has been preserved by Preservation Virginia formerly known as the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities It is considered to be an important landmark and museum essential to an understanding of the Chief Justice s life and work 160 Additionally his birthplace in Fauquier County Virginia has been preserved as the John Marshall Birthplace Park An engraved portrait of Marshall appears on U S paper money on the series 1890 and 1891 treasury notes These rare notes are in great demand by note collectors today Also in 1914 an engraved portrait of Marshall was used as the central vignette on series 1914 500 federal reserve notes These notes are also quite scarce William McKinley replaced Marshall on the 500 bill in 1928 Examples of both notes are available for viewing on the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco website 177 178 Marshall was also featured on a commemorative silver dollar in 2005 In 1955 the United States Postal Service released the 40 Liberty Issue postage stamp honoring him 179 Chief Justice John Marshall a bronze statue of Marshall wearing his judicial robes stands on the ground floor inside the U S Supreme Court building Unveiled in 1884 and initially placed on the west plaza of the U S Capitol it was sculpted by William Wetmore Story His father Joseph Story had served on the Supreme Court with Marshall 180 Another casting of the statue is located at the north end of John Marshall Park in Washington D C the sculpture The Chess Players commemorating Marshall s love for the game of chess is located on the east side of the park 181 and a third is situated on the grounds of the Philadelphia Museum of Art 182 Marshall Michigan was named in his honor five years before Marshall s death It was the first of dozens of communities and counties named for him 183 Marshall County Kentucky 184 Marshall County Illinois 185 Marshall County Indiana 186 Marshall County Iowa 187 and Marshall County West Virginia 185 are also named in his honor Marshall College named in honor of Chief Justice Marshall officially opened in 1836 After a merger with Franklin College in 1853 the school was renamed as Franklin and Marshall College and relocated to Lancaster Pennsylvania 188 Marshall University 189 Cleveland Marshall College of Law 190 John Marshall Law School Atlanta 191 and formerly the John Marshall Law School now the University of Illinois Chicago School of Law are or were also named for Marshall 190 nbsp Marshall on the 1890 20 Treasury Note one of 53 people depicted on United States banknotes nbsp John Marshall on a Postal Issue of 1894 nbsp John Marshall 40c stamp issue of 1958On May 20 2021 the former John Marshall Law School in Chicago announced its official change of name to University of Illinois Chicago School of Law effective July 1 192 The university board of trustees acknowledged that newly discovered research 193 uncovered by historian Paul Finkelman 194 had revealed that Marshall was a slave trader and owner who practised pro slavery jurisprudence which was deemed inappropriate for the school s namesake 193 Numerous elementary middle junior high and high schools around the nation have been named for him The John Marshall commemorative dollar was minted in 2005 See also editList of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Marshall Court Discovery doctrineNotes edit Other notable relatives of Marshall include Senator Humphrey Marshall 6 Thomas Francis Marshall 7 Confederate Army colonel Charles Marshall and General of the Army George Marshall 8 Prior to the ratification of the Twelfth Amendment in 1804 each member of the Electoral College cast two votes with no distinction made between votes for president and vice president In the election of 1800 Jefferson and his ostensible running mate Burr each received 73 electoral votes while Adams finished in third place with 65 votes To Marshall s dismay the Judiciary Act of 1802 also eliminated sixteen circuit court judgeships and reintroduced the requirement that the Supreme Court Justices ride circuit Marshall rode circuit in Virginia and North Carolina the busiest judicial circuit in the country at that time 76 The Supreme Court would not strike down another federal law until the 1857 case of Dred Scott v Sandford 80 An earlier case Martin v Hunter s Lessee had established that the Court could hear appeals from state courts in civil lawsuits References edit Justices 1789 to Present Washington D C United States Supreme Court Archived from the original on April 15 2010 Retrieved June 5 2018 See here Archived March 5 2016 at the Wayback Machine for maps of where the Marshall land was located within Germantown Cf http www johnmarshallfoundation org john marshall historic landmarks birth place of john marshall Archived March 28 2014 at the Wayback Machine a b Paul 2018 pp 11 12 Smith 1998 pp 26 27 Paul 2018 p 246 Marshall Humphrey 1760 1841 Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress 1774 Present Washington D C United States Congress Archived from the original on July 13 2011 Retrieved June 11 2018 Marshall Thomas Francis 1801 1864 Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress 1774 Present Washington D C United States Congress Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 11 2018 Fully the Equal of the Best George C Marshall and the Virginia Military Institute PDF Lexington Virginia George C Marshall Foundation p 2 Archived PDF from the original on April 12 2019 Retrieved June 11 2018 Wood Gordon S 2011 Kennedy David M ed Empire of Liberty A History of the Early Republic 1789 1815 The Oxford History of the United States New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 983246 0 Quoted in Baker 1974 p 4 and Stites 1981 p 7 Paul 2018 pp 13 14 Smith 1998 p 35 Smith 1998 p 22 Paul 2018 p 11 Paul 2018 pp 15 18 John Marshall at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges a publication of the Federal Judicial Center Paul 2018 pp 18 19 Smith 1998 pp 75 82 Paul 2018 pp 24 25 Paul 2018 pp 25 26 Smith 1998 p 105 Paul 2018 pp 27 29 Paul 2018 pp 30 31 Paul 2018 p 34 Paul 2018 pp 35 38 Paul 2018 pp 43 44 Paul 2018 p 45 Paul 2018 pp 87 94 Paul 2018 pp 96 99 Smith 1998 p 157 Flanders 1904 pp 30 31 38 Paul 2018 pp 107 108 McCullough 2001 pp 486 487 McCullough 2001 p 495 McCullough 2001 pp pp 495 496 502 Paul 2018 pp 167 175 176 Paul 2018 pp 172 174 Paul 2018 p 175 Paul 2018 pp 178 181 Paul 2018 pp 182 183 a b Smith 1998 pp 258 259 Paul 2018 p 184 Paul 2018 pp 186 187 Paul 2018 p 192 Smith 1998 pp 268 286 Paul 2018 pp 193 194 Paul 2018 pp 196 198 Paul 2018 pp 208 209 Paul 2018 pp 215 218 Paul 2018 pp 220 221 Paul 2018 pp 218 221 227 228 Colvin Nathan L Foley Edward B 2010 The Twelfth Amendment A Constitutional Ticking Time Bomb University of Miami Law Review 64 2 475 534 Archived from the original on February 15 2020 Retrieved June 5 2020 Stites 1981 pp 77 80 Paul 2018 pp 221 222 Robarge 2000 p xvi Paul 2018 p 222 Quoted in Stites 1981 p 80 Smith 1998 p 16 Paul 2018 pp 225 226 Unger Harlow Giles November 16 2014 Why Naming John Marshall Chief Justice Was John Adams s Greatest Gift to the Nation History News Network Archived from the original on February 11 2017 Retrieved February 8 2017 Paul 2018 p 232 Paul 2018 p 223 Paul 2018 pp 3 4 Schwartz 1993 pp 67 68 FindLaw Supreme Court Center John Marshall Archived November 21 2009 at the Wayback Machine White 1991 pp 157 200 Smith 1998 pp 351 352 422 506 Albert Jeremiah Beveridge 1919 The life of John Marshall vol 4 p 94 Hobson 1996 pp 15 16 119 123 George Gibbs 1846 Memoirs of the Administrations of Washington and John Adams vol II p 350 Paul 2018 pp 298 299 306 308 Fox John Expanding Democracy Biographies of the Robes John Marshall Public Broadcasting Service Archived from the original on September 23 2017 Retrieved September 1 2017 a b Currie 1992 pp 152 155 A reliable statement of the quote was recounted by Theophilus Parsons a law professor who knew Marshall personally Parsons August 20 1870 Distinguished Lawyers Albany Law Journal pp 126 127 online Archived December 16 2014 at the Wayback Machine Historian Edward Corwin garbled the quote to Now Story that is the law you find the precedents for it and that incorrect version has been repeated Edward Corwin 1919 John Marshall and the Constitution a chronicle of the Supreme Court p 119 Paul 2018 pp 243 247 Paul 2018 pp 246 247 250 Paul 2018 pp 251 252 Paul 2018 pp 252 253 Paul 2018 pp 255 257 a b Paul 2018 p 257 Paul 2018 pp 258 259 Gordon S Wood ed by Robert A Licht 1993 Judicial Review in the Era of the Founding in Is the Supreme Court the guardian of the Constitution pp 153 166 Paul 2018 pp 260 261 Paul 2018 pp 276 277 Paul 2018 pp 279 280 a b Senate Prepares for Impeachment Trial United States Senate Archived from the original on March 8 2018 Retrieved September 12 2018 Greenhouse Linda April 10 1996 Rehnquist Joins Fray on Rulings Defending Judicial Independence The New York Times Archived from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 the 1805 Senate trial of Justice Samuel Chase who had been impeached by the House of Representatives This decision by the Senate was enormously important in securing the kind of judicial independence contemplated by Article III of the Constitution Chief Justice Rehnquist said Hobson 2006 pp 1430 1431 1434 1435 Paul 2018 pp 282 283 Paul 2018 pp 291 292 Paul 2018 pp 293 295 Paul 2018 pp 300 303 Paul 2018 pp 304 305 Currie 1992 p 136 Paul 2018 pp 339 341 Paul 2018 p 341 Edward Samuel Corwin 1919 John Marshall and the Constitution a chronicle of the Supreme Court p 133 Paul 2018 pp 341 342 Paul 2018 pp 342 344 Paul 2018 pp 344 345 Paul 2018 pp 345 346 Paul 2018 pp 365 367 Paul 2018 pp 368 370 Paul 2018 pp 370 371 Paul 2018 pp 386 387 Paul 2018 pp 410 412 Paul 2018 pp 388 389 396 397 Paul 2018 pp 399 405 Paul 2018 pp 412 413 Paul 2018 pp 414 416 Paul 2018 pp 419 420 Paul 2018 pp 421 423 Boller Paul F John H George 1989 They Never Said It A Book of False Quotes Misquotes amp False Attributions New York Oxford University Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 19 506469 8 Archived from the original on October 29 2017 Retrieved October 18 2020 Paul 2018 pp 423 425 Paul 2018 pp 267 270 Paul 2018 pp 335 338 Paul 2018 pp 375 380 Paul 2018 pp 382 383 Hobson 2006 p 1437 Paul 2018 pp 247 250 Foran William A October 1937 John Marshall as a Historian American Historical Review 43 1 51 64 doi 10 2307 1840187 JSTOR 1840187 Note Online Library of Liberty Archived from the original on January 11 2011 Retrieved January 15 2010 Marshall John Abridgment Cary amp Lea Archived from the original on August 6 2010 Retrieved January 15 2010 1830 Virginia Constitution www wvculture org Archived from the original on September 26 2006 Retrieved July 23 2015 a b c Determining the Facts Reading 3 A Locket and a Strand of Hair Symbols of Love and Family Teaching with Historic Places The Great Chief Justice at Home Washington D C National Park Service U S Department of the Interior Archived from the original on May 15 2017 Retrieved June 5 2018 Smith John Marshall p 523 John Marshall Biography Supreme Court Justice 1755 1835 www biography com A amp E Television Networks Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 11 2018 Thayer James Bradley John Marshall The Atlantic Monthly March 1901 retrieved Dec 18 2022 Christensen George A Here Lies the Supreme Court Gravesites of the Justices Yearbook 1983 Supreme Court Historical Society Washington D C Supreme Court Historical Society 1983 17 30 Archived from the original on September 3 2005 Retrieved June 5 2018 via Internet Archive Fox Genovese Elizabeth Genovese Eugene D 2005 The Mind of the Master Class History and Faith in the Southern Slaveholders Worldview Cambridge University Press p 278 ISBN 9780521850650 Archived from the original on December 31 2016 Retrieved June 12 2018 Nominations Washington D C Office of the Secretary United States Senate Archived from the original on April 7 2019 Retrieved June 11 2018 Finkelman Paul August 31 2020 Master John Marshall and the Problem of Slavery lawreviewblog uchicago edu The University of Chicago Law Review Online Retrieved March 7 2023 Frances Howell Rudko Pause at the Rubicon John Marshall and Emancipation Reparations in the early national period 35 John Marshall Law Review 75 77 78 2001 Last Will and Testament partial transcribed manuscript at Library of Virginia original having been lost during the Richmond fire set during the Confederate retreat but portions having been transcribed during an Alexandria Virginia court case Rudko p 81 et seq a b Rudko at p 78 Paul 2018 pp 46 48 Paul 2018 pp 49 51 Rudko p 84 Bryant Jonathan M Dark Places of the Earth The Voyage of the Slave Ship Antelope Liveright 2015 pp 227 239 ISBN 978 0871406750 Charles F Hobson Review Essay Paul Finkelman s Supreme Injustice 43 J S Ct History pp 363 365 367 2018 Henrico County erected a historical marker in 2005 https ww hmdb org m asp m 20730 permanent dead link The Marshall dwelling having been destroyed before the American Civil War trenches were dug on the property in 1862 The current historic house event center was built in 1918 and it and surrounding gardens are now a park https henrico us rec places armour house Archived July 20 2021 at the Wayback Machine Moving his household there according to Paul 2018 p Paul 2018 p The Founders and the Pursuit of Land Archived from the original on August 12 2021 Retrieved July 20 2021 Lawrence B Custer Bushrod Washington and John Marshall a preliminary inquiry 4 Am J Legal Hist 34 43 1960 Hobson pp 368 369 Hobson p 66 Finkelman 2016 Finkelman 2018 Much of Chapter 2 of his 2018 Supreme Injustice book was reprinted without addressing Rudko s cited work nor Hobson s published concerns but thanking Hobson and others for reviewing a draft in the 2020 U Chi L Rev Online on August 31 2020 as Master John Marshall and the Problem of Slavery Archived August 21 2021 at the Wayback Machine and John Marshall s Proslavery Jurisprudence Racism Property and the Great Chief Justice Archived August 21 2021 at the Wayback Machine America s Great Chief Justice Was an Unrepentant Slaveholder www msn com Archived from the original on August 17 2021 Retrieved June 15 2021 Paul 2018 pp 21 22 Albert Beveridge Life of John Marshall pp 72 73 Newmyer 2001 p 34 Paul 2018 pp 299 300 John Marshall House Richmond Virginia Archived from the original on October 13 2005 National Park Service Marshall s Richmond home a b National Park Service The Great Chief Justice at Home Teaching with Historic Places TwHP lesson plan Paul 2018 pp 275 276 Clarence J Elder amp Margaret Pearson Welsh August 1983 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination D S Tavern PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 26 2012 Retrieved May 20 2013 Smith John Marshall pp 36 406 Tignor Thomas A The Greatest and Best Brother John Marshall at Archived January 28 2011 at the Wayback Machine masonicworld com Marshall Humphrey 1760 1841 Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress 1774 Present Washington D C United States Congress Archived from the original on July 13 2011 Retrieved June 11 2018 Marshall Thomas Francis 1801 1864 Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress 1774 Present Washington D C United States Congress Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 11 2018 Fully the Equal of the Best George C Marshall and the Virginia Military Institute PDF Lexington Virginia George C Marshall Foundation p 2 Archived PDF from the original on April 12 2019 Retrieved June 11 2018 Smith 1998 p 8 Newmyer 2007 p 251 Baume Sandrine 2011 Hans Kelsen and the Case for Democracy ECPR Press pp 53 54 Ackerman Bruce 1991 We the People Waldron Jeremy 2006 The Core of the case against judicial review The Yale Law Review 2006 Vol 115 pp 1346 406 Kurland Philip ed 1970 Felix Frankfurter on the Supreme Court Extrajudicial Essays on the Court and the Constitution Cambridge Massachusetts The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press The Papers of John Marshall Digital Edition rotunda upress virginia edu Archived from the original on June 13 2015 Retrieved July 23 2015 Beveridge Albert J Albert Jeremiah Albert Jeremiah Beveridge collection of John Marshall papers 1776 1844 Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved March 15 2018 John Marshall Papers Special Collections Research Center Earl Gregg Swem Library College of William amp Mary Archived from the original on January 11 2012 Retrieved February 4 2011 Pictures of large size Federal Reserve Notes featuring John Marshall provided by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved August 3 2006 Pictures of US Treasury Notes featuring John Marshall provided by the Archived January 16 2009 at the Wayback Machine Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Rod Steven J May 16 2006 Arago 40 cent Marshall National Postal Museum Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on February 3 2016 Retrieved January 26 2019 Statue of John Marshall Architects Virtual Capitol Architect of the Capitol Washington DC Archived from the original on June 5 2017 Retrieved June 5 2018 Goode James M Seferlis Clift A 2008 Washington sculpture a cultural history of outdoor sculpture in the nation s capital Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0801888106 OCLC 183610465 Waite Morrison Remick Rawle William Henry Association Philadelphia Bar 1884 Exercises at the ceremony of unveiling the statue of John by Morrison Remick Waite William Henry Rawle Philadelphia Bar Association pp 1 3 5 9 23 29 Archived from the original on August 15 2021 Retrieved October 18 2020 City of Marshall Michigan The Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society Volume 1 Kentucky State Historical Society 1903 p 36 a b Gannett Henry 1905 The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States U S Government Printing Office p 200 De Witt Clinton Goodrich amp Charles Richard Tuttle 1875 An Illustrated History of the State of Indiana Indiana R S Peale amp co pp 567 Courthouse History Marshall County Iowa Archived from the original on October 29 2018 Retrieved January 26 2019 Mission and History Franklin amp Marshall University Archived from the original on January 26 2019 Retrieved January 26 2019 Brown Lisle ed Marshall Academy 1837 Archived June 28 2014 at the Wayback Machine Marshall University Special Collections September 1 2004 Dec 20 2006 a b Newmyer R Kent 2001 John Marshall and the Heroic Age of the Supreme Court LSU Press p 477 ISBN 978 0807127018 Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Retrieved January 26 2019 Atlanta s John Marshall Law School The Law School Admission Council Archived from the original on January 26 2019 Retrieved January 26 2019 UIC Removes John Marshall s Name From Law School Due to Slave Ownership NBC Chicago Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved June 22 2021 a b UIC renaming John Marshall Law School Archived May 24 2021 at the Wayback Machine by Stefano Esposito Chicago Sun Times May 21 2021 Retrieved May 21 2021 Editorial A law school discounts John Marshall s positive legacy Archived July 5 2021 at the Wayback Machine Chicago Tribune May 25 2021 Retrieved May 26 2021 Works cited edit External videos nbsp Q amp A interview with Joel Richard Paul on Without Precedent October 21 2018 C SPAN nbsp Presentation by Richard Brookhiser on John Marshall The Man Who Made the Supreme Court November 27 2018 C SPANCurrie David 1992 The Constitution in the Supreme Court The First Hundred Years 1789 1888 University of Chicago ISBN 978 0 226 13109 2 Finkelman Paul 2016 CollegeOfLawUsask November 21 2016 Ariel Sallows Lecture presented by Paul Finkelman Archived from the original on November 3 2021 via YouTube Finkelman Paul 2018 Supreme Injustice Slavery in the Nation s Highest Court Cambridge Mass Harvard U P ISBN 9780674051218 Flanders Henry 1904 The Life of John Marshall T amp J W Johnson amp Company Hobson Charles F 2006 Defining the Office John Marshall as Chief Justice University of Pennsylvania Law Review 154 6 1421 1461 doi 10 2307 40041344 JSTOR 40041344 Hobson Charles F 1996 The Great Chief Justice John Marshall and the Rule of Law University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700607884 McCullough David 2001 John Adams New York Simon amp Schuster p 144 ISBN 978 1 4165 7588 7 Newmyer R Kent 2001 John Marshall and the Heroic Age of the Supreme Court Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 2701 8 Paul Joel Richard 2018 Without Precedent Chief Justice John Marshall and His Times Riverhead Books ISBN 978 1594488238 Schwartz Bernard 1993 A History of the Supreme Court Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195080995 Smith Jean Edward 1998 1996 John Marshall Definer Of A Nation Reprint ed Owl Books ISBN 978 0 8050 5510 8 Stites Francis N 1981 John Marshall Defender of the Constitution Little Brown ISBN 978 0 673 39353 1 White G Edward 1991 The Marshall Court and Cultural Change 1815 1835 Abridged ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195070583 Further reading editSecondary sources 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 978 0742558953 Baker Leonard 1974 John Marshall A Life in the Law Macmillan ISBN 978 0025063600 Beveridge Albert J The Life of John Marshall in 4 volumes Boston Houghton Mifflin Co 1919 winner of the Pulitzer Prize Volume I Volume II Archived January 31 2009 at the Wayback Machine Volume III and Volume IV at Internet Archive Brookhiser Richard 2018 John Marshall The Man Who Made the Supreme Court Basic Books ISBN 978 0465096237 Clinton Robert Lowry 2008 The Marshall Court Justices Rulings and Legacy ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1576078433 Corwin Edwin S 2009 1919 John Marshall and the Constitution A Chronicle of the Supreme Court Dodo Press ISBN 978 1409965558 online Edition Archived July 4 2020 at the Wayback Machine at Project Gutenberg 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 Goldstone Lawrence 2008 The Activist John Marshall Marbury v Madison and the Myth of Judicial Review Walker ISBN 978 0802714886 Graber Mark A 1998 Federalist or Friends of Adams The Marshall Court and Party Politics Studies in American Political Development 12 2 229 266 doi 10 1017 s0898588x98001539 S2CID 146619844 Archived from the original on June 1 2020 Retrieved July 6 2019 Johnson Herbert A 1998 The Chief Justiceship of John Marshall 1801 1835 University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1570032943 Lossing Benson John William Barrit 2005 1855 Our countrymen or Brief memoirs of eminent Americans Illustrated by one hundred and three portraits Scholarly Publishing Office University of Michigan Library ISBN 978 1 4255 4394 5 Martin Fenton S Goehlert Robert U 1990 The U S Supreme Court A Bibliography Washington DC Congressional Quarterly Books ISBN 978 0 87187 554 9 Newmyer R Kent 2005 The Supreme Court under Marshall and Taney 2nd ed Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0882952413 Paxton W M William McClung March 15 1885 The Marshall family or A genealogical chart of the descendants of John Marshall and Elizabeth Markham his wife sketches of individuals and notices of families connected with them Cincinnati R Clarke amp Co via Internet Archive Robarge David Scott 2000 A Chief Justice s Progress John Marshall from Revolutionary Virginia to the Supreme Court Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0313308581 Rotunda Ronald D 2018 John Marshall and the Cases That United the States of America Beveridge s Abridged Life of John Marshall Twelve Tables Press ISBN 978 1946074140 Rudko Frances H 1991 John Marshall Statesman and Chief Justice Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 27932 4 Shevory Thomas C 1994 John Marshall s Law Interpretation Ideology and Interest Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 27932 4 Sloan Cliff McKean David 2009 The Great Decision Jefferson Adams Marshall and the Battle for the Supreme Court PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1586484262 Simon James F 2003 What Kind of Nation Thomas Jefferson John Marshall and the Epic Struggle to Create a United States Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0684848716 Strauss Robert 2021 John Marshall The Final Founder Lyons Press ISBN 978 1493037476 Unger Harlow Giles 2014 John Marshall The Chief Justice Who Saved the Nation Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0306822209 White G Edward 2001 Reassessing John Marshall William and Mary Quarterly 58 3 673 693 doi 10 2307 2674300 JSTOR 2674300 Primary sources edit Brockenbrough John W ed Reports of Cases Decided by the Honourable John Marshall late Chief Justice of the United States in the Circuit Court of the United States District of Virginia and North Carolina From 1802 to 1833 Inclusive in Two Volumes Philadelphia 1837 Volume 1 and Volume 2 Archived November 28 2015 at the Wayback Machine These are Marshall s decisions in the District Court not the Supreme Court decisions For United States Supreme Court decisions see below under Cotton and Dillon Cotton Joseph Peter Jr ed The Constitutional Decisions of John Marshall in two volumes 1905 Vol 1 Vol 2 New York and London Dickinson Marquis F ed John Marshall The Tribute of Massachusetts Being The Addresses Delivered at Boston and Cambridge February 4 1901 In Commemoration of The One Hundredth Anniversary of His Elevation to the Bench as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States Boston Little Brown and Company 1901 Dillon John M ed John Marshall The Complete Constitutional Decisions 1903 Chicago Hobson Charles F Perdue Susan Holbrook and Lovelace Joan S eds The Papers of John Marshall published by University of North Carolina Press for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture the standard scholarly edition most recent volume online guide Vol XII Correspondence Papers and Selected Judicial Opinions January 1831 July 1835 with Addendum June 1783 January 1829 2006 ISBN 978 0 8078 3019 2 Hobson Charles F John Marshall Writings Library of America New York 2010 This volume collects 196 documents written between 1779 and 1835 including Marshall s most important judicial opinions his influential rulings during the Aaron Burr treason trial speeches newspaper essays and revealing letters to friends fellow judges and his beloved wife Polly ISBN 978 1 59853 064 3 Table of Contents Archived July 8 2010 at the Wayback Machine Marshall John The Events of My Life An Autobiographical Sketch by John Marshall Introduction by William H Rehnquist Chief Justice of the United States Edited by Lee C Bollinger and John C Dann Jointly published by Clements Library University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI and Supreme Court Historical Society Washington D C 2001 Oster John Edward ed The Political and Economic Doctrines of John Marshall 1914 New York Story Joseph Memoir of the Hon John Marshall LL D Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States In Joseph Story s Miscellaneous Writings pp 183 200 An expanded version Character and Services of Chief Justice John Marshall A Discourse Pronounced October 15 1835 At the Request of the Suffolk BarArchived October 17 2015 at the Wayback Machine in the second edition of Story s Miscellaneous Writings pp 639 697 Story Joseph ed 1891 reprint of the 1837 edition Writings of John Marshall late Chief Justice of the United States upon the Federal Constitution at Internet ArchiveExternal links editJohn Marshall at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks Works by John Marshall at Project Gutenberg The Life of George Washington Vol 1 of 5 Commander in Chief of the American Forces During the War which Established the Independence of his Country and First President of the United States English The Life of George Washington Vol 2 of 5 The Life of George Washington Vol 3 of 5 The Life of George Washington Vol 4 of 5 The Life of George Washington Vol 5 of 5 United States Congress John Marshall id M000157 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Works by or about John Marshall at Internet Archive Works by John Marshall at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp The John Marshall Foundation Richmond Virginia John Marshall Papers 1755 1835 at The College of William amp Mary National Park Service The Great Chief Justice at Home Teaching with Historic Places TwHP lesson plan Research Collections Marshall John at the Federal Judicial Center Virginia Historical Society 1 Archived August 5 2019 at the Wayback Machine Video Biography of John Marshall U S House of RepresentativesPreceded byJohn Clopton Member of the U S House of Representatives from Virginia s 13th congressional district1799 1800 Succeeded byLittleton TazewellPolitical officesPreceded byTimothy Pickering United States Secretary of State1800 1801 Succeeded byJames MadisonLegal officesPreceded byOliver Ellsworth Chief Justice of the United States1801 1835 Succeeded byRoger Taney Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Marshall amp oldid 1200585266, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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