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John Marshall Harlan

John Marshall Harlan (June 1, 1833 – October 14, 1911) was an American lawyer and politician who served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1877 until his death in 1911. He is often called "The Great Dissenter" due to his many dissents in cases that restricted civil liberties, including the Civil Rights Cases, Plessy v. Ferguson, and Giles v. Harris. Many of Harlan's views expressed in his notable dissents would become the official view of the Supreme Court starting from the 1950s Warren Court and onward.

John Marshall Harlan
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
In office
December 10, 1877 – October 14, 1911
Nominated byRutherford B. Hayes
Preceded byDavid Davis
Succeeded byMahlon Pitney
Attorney General of Kentucky
In office
September 1, 1863 – September 3, 1867
GovernorThomas Bramlette
Preceded byAndrew James
Succeeded byJohn Rodman
Personal details
Born(1833-06-01)June 1, 1833
Boyle County, Kentucky, U.S.
DiedOctober 14, 1911(1911-10-14) (aged 78)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Resting placeRock Creek Cemetery
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Political partyWhig (before 1854)
Know Nothing (1854–1858)
Opposition (1858–1860)
Constitutional Union (1860)
Unionist (1861–1867)
Republican (1868–1911)
Spouse
(m. 1856)
RelationsJohn Marshall Harlan II (grandson), Robert James Harlan (brother)
Children6, including James and John Maynard
Parents
EducationCentre College (BA)
Transylvania University
Signature
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
Years of service1861–1863
RankColonel
Unit10th Kentucky Infantry
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War

Born into a prominent, slave-holding family near Danville, Kentucky, Harlan experienced a quick rise to political prominence. When the American Civil War broke out, Harlan strongly supported the Union and recruited the 10th Kentucky Infantry. Despite his opposition to the Emancipation Proclamation, he served in the war until 1863, when he was elected attorney general of Kentucky. Harlan lost his re-election bid in 1867 and joined the Republican Party in the following year, quickly emerging as the leader of the Kentucky Republican Party. In 1877, President Rutherford B. Hayes appointed Harlan to the Supreme Court.

Harlan's jurisprudence was marked by his life-long belief in a strong national government, his sympathy for the economically disadvantaged, and his view that the Reconstruction Amendments had fundamentally transformed the relationship between the federal government and the state governments. He was the sole dissenter in both the Civil Rights Cases (1883) and Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), which permitted state and private actors to engage in segregation. He also wrote dissents in major cases such as Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. (1895), which struck down a federal income tax; United States v. E. C. Knight Co. (1895), which severely limited the power of the federal government to pursue antitrust actions; Lochner v. New York (1905), which invalidated a state law setting maximum working hours on the basis of substantive due process; and Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey v. United States (1911), which established the rule of reason. He was the first Supreme Court justice to advocate the incorporation of the Bill of Rights, and his majority opinion in Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Co. v. City of Chicago (1897) incorporated the Takings Clause.

Harlan was largely forgotten in the decades after his death, but many scholars now consider him to be one of the greatest Supreme Court justices of his era. His grandson John Marshall Harlan II later served on Supreme Court from 1955 to 1971.

Early life and education edit

Harlan was born in 1833 at Harlan's Station, 5 miles (8.0 km) west of Danville, Kentucky, on Salt River Road. He was born into a prominent slaveholding family whose earliest members had settled in the region in 1779. Harlan's father was James Harlan, a lawyer and prominent Whig politician who represented Kentucky in the United States House of Representatives and served as Secretary of State of Kentucky. Harlan's mother, Elizabeth, née Davenport, was the daughter of a pioneer from Virginia.[citation needed] Harlan grew up on the family estate near Frankfort, Kentucky.[1] He was named after Chief Justice of the United States John Marshall, whom his father admired.[2] The first ancestor of the Harlan family was George Harlan, an Englishman who arrived to the American Colony of Pennsylvania in the 1600s.[3]

John had several older brothers, including a mixed-race half-brother, Robert James Harlan, born in 1816 into slavery, and whom his father raised in his own household and had tutored by Richard and James Harlan, two of John Marshall Harlan's older brothers.[4] According to historian Allyson Hobbs, Robert became highly successful, making a fortune in the California Gold Rush before returning east and settling in Cincinnati, Ohio.[5] He "remained close to the other Harlans"; she suggests this might have influenced his half-brother John Marshall Harlan, "who argued on behalf of equal rights under the law in Plessy v. Ferguson."[5]

After attending school in Frankfort, John Harlan enrolled at Centre College. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi and graduated with honors. Though his mother wanted Harlan to become a merchant, James insisted that his son follow him into the legal profession, and Harlan joined his father's law practice in 1852.[6] While James Harlan could have trained his son in the office, as was the norm of "reading the law" in that era, he sent John to attend law school at Transylvania University in 1850, where George Robertson and Thomas Alexander Marshall were among his instructors.[6] Harlan finished his legal education in his father's law office[7] and was admitted to the Kentucky Bar in 1853.[8][9]

Politician and lawyer edit

Rise: 1851–1863 edit

A member of the Whig Party like his father, Harlan got an early start in politics when, in 1851, he was offered the post of adjutant general of the state by governor John L. Helm.[10] He served in the post for the next eight years, which gave him a statewide presence and familiarity with many of Kentucky's leading political figures. With the Whig Party's dissolution in the early 1850s, Harlan shifted his affiliation to the Know Nothings, despite his discomfort with their opposition to Catholicism. Harlan's personal popularity within the state was such that he was able to survive the decline of the Know Nothing movement in the late 1850s, winning election in 1858 as the county judge for Franklin County, Kentucky. The following year, he renounced his allegiance to the Know Nothings and joined the state's Opposition Party, serving as their candidate in an unsuccessful attempt to defeat Democrat William E. Simms for the seat in Kentucky's 8th congressional district.[11]

Throughout the 1850s, Harlan criticized both abolitionists and pro-slavery radicals.[12] Like many other anti-secession Southerners, he supported the Constitutional Union ticket of John Bell and Edward Everett in the 1860 presidential election. Harlan agreed to serve as a presidential elector for Bell, and he delivered speeches on behalf of the party throughout Kentucky during the campaign.[13] In the secession crisis that followed Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln's victory in the 1860 election, Harlan sought to prevent Kentucky from seceding. He wrote several pro-Union editorials, represented the Union in state court, and joined a militia known as the Crittenden Union Zouaves.[14]

After the state legislature voted to expel all Confederate forces from the state, Harlan recruited a company that was mustered into the service as the 10th Kentucky Infantry.[15] Harlan served in the Western Theater of the American Civil War until the death of his father James in February 1863. At that time, Harlan resigned his commission as colonel and returned to Frankfort to support his family.[16]

Party leader: 1863–1877 edit

Weeks after leaving the army, Harlan was nominated by the Union Party to run for Attorney General of Kentucky. Campaigning on a platform of vigorous prosecution of the war, he won the election by a considerable margin. As attorney general for the state, Harlan issued legal opinions and advocated for the state in a number of court cases. Party politics, however, occupied much of his time.[17] Though still a committed unionist, he opposed Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation and supported Democratic candidate George B. McClellan's unsuccessful campaign in the 1864 presidential election.[18] Harlan also opposed ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment, attacking it as a "direct interference, by a portion of the states, with the local concerns of other states."[19]

After the end of the Civil War in 1865, Harlan initially refused to join either the Democratic Party, which he viewed as too accepting of former rebels, or the Republican Party, whose Reconstruction policies he opposed. He sought re-election in 1867 on a third party ticket,[a] but lost his office in a Democratic sweep of the state. In the aftermath of his defeat, Harlan joined the Republican Party, and he supported Ulysses S. Grant's candidacy in the 1868 presidential election.[20] Moving to Louisville, Harlan formed a successful partnership with John E. Newman, a former circuit court judge, and like Harlan, a Unionist turned Republican.[21] In 1870, Harlan and Newman briefly took on a new partner, Benjamin Bristow, but President Grant appointed Bristow as U.S. solicitor general later that year.[22]

While growing his legal practice, Harlan also worked to build up the Republican Party organization in the state.[21] He served as the Republican nominee for governor of Kentucky in 1871; though he finished a distant second to incumbent Democratic Governor Preston Leslie, Harlan nonetheless established himself as the leader of the Kentucky Republican Party during the campaign.[23] Harlan's views on Reconstruction shifted in the early 1870s, and he came to support Reconstruction measures such as the Enforcement Act of 1870, though he still opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1875 as a federal overreach.[24] Harlan reluctantly accepted the party's gubernatorial nomination in 1875, and he once again lost by a substantial margin, this time to Democrat James B. McCreary.[25] The following year, Harlan worked to nominate Bristow at the 1876 Republican National Convention, seeking to position Bristow as a more electable alternative to Republican front-runner James G. Blaine.[26] When Rutherford B. Hayes instead emerged as the compromise candidate, Harlan switched his delegation's votes and subsequently campaigned on Hayes' behalf in the 1876 election.[21]

Supreme Court Justice edit

 
The Supreme Court, headed by Melville Fuller, 1898; with Harlan in the front row, second from left

Nomination edit

Though Harlan was considered for several positions in the new administration, most notably Attorney General, initially the only job he was offered was as a member of a commission sent to Louisiana to resolve disputed statewide elections there. Justice David Davis, however, had resigned from the Supreme Court in January 1877 after being elected to the Senate by the Illinois General Assembly.[27] Seeking to appoint a Southerner to the Supreme Court in the aftermath of the acrimonious and disputed 1876 presidential election, Hayes settled on Harlan.[28] Though Harlan's nomination prompted some criticism from Republican Stalwarts, he was confirmed unanimously by the Senate on November 29, 1877,[27] and took the judicial oath of office on December 10, 1877.[29]

Life on the Court edit

Harlan greatly enjoyed his time as a justice, serving until his death in 1911. From the start, he established good relationships with his fellow justices and he was close friends with a number of them.[30] Though Harlan often disagreed with the other justices, occasionally quite vociferously, he was able to separate differences over legal matters from personal relationship.[31] During his tenure, money problems continually plagued him, particularly as he began to put his three sons through college. Debt was a constant concern, and in the early 1880s, he considered resigning from the Court and returning to private practice. He ultimately decided to remain on the Court, but supplemented his income by teaching constitutional law at the Columbian Law School, which later became the George Washington University Law School.[30]

When Harlan began his service, the Supreme Court faced a heavy workload that consisted primarily of diversity and removal cases, with only a few constitutional issues. Justices also rode circuit in the various federal judicial circuits; though these usually corresponded to the region from which the justice was appointed, due to his junior status, Harlan was assigned the Seventh Circuit based in Chicago. Harlan rode the Seventh Circuit until 1896, when he switched to his home circuit, the Sixth, upon the death of its previous holder, Justice Howell Edmunds Jackson.[32] Harlan became the senior associate justice on the Court following the retirement of Stephen Johnson Field in 1897, and he served as acting chief justice after the death of Melville Fuller in 1910.[33]

Jurisprudence edit

During Harlan's tenure on the Supreme Court, major Supreme Court decisions tended to address issues arising from industrialization and the Reconstruction Amendments. Beginning in the 1880s, the Supreme Court increasingly began to adopt a laissez-faire philosophy, striking down economic regulations while at the same time allowing states to curtail the rights of African Americans.[34] Harlan differed from many of his colleagues, often voting to uphold federal regulations and to protect the civil rights of African Americans.[35] His judicial opinions were influenced by his life-long belief in a strong national government, his sympathy for the economically disadvantaged, and his view that the Reconstruction Amendments had fundamentally transformed the relationship between the federal government and the state governments.[36] Though Harlan believed the Court had the power to review state and federal actions on a broad array of topics, he tended to oppose judicial activism in favor of deference to legislatures.[37]

Earlier cases, 1877–1896 edit

Congress had passed the Civil Rights Act of 1875 in the waning days of Reconstruction, outlawing segregation in public accommodations such as railroads. The Supreme Court did not rule on the Civil Rights Act of 1875 until 1883, when it struck down the law in Civil Rights Cases.[38] In his majority opinion, Justice Joseph P. Bradley held that the Thirteenth Amendment "simply abolished slavery," and that the Fourteenth Amendment did not authorize Congress to bar racial discrimination by private actors. Only Harlan dissented, vigorously, charging that the majority had subverted the Reconstruction Amendments: "The substance and spirit of the recent amendments of the constitution have been sacrificed by a subtle and ingenious verbal criticism." Harlan argued that the Fourteenth Amendment gave Congress the authority to regulate public accommodations, and further argued that the Thirteenth Amendment empowered Congress to "eradicate" the vestiges of slavery, such as restrictions on freedom of movement.[39]

Harlan joined the Court's unanimous decision in Pace v. Alabama (1883), which ruled that anti-miscegenation laws were constitutional.

Harlan was the first justice to argue that the Fourteenth Amendment incorporated the Bill of Rights (making rights guarantees applicable to the individual states), in Hurtado v. California (1884).[citation needed]

Harlan was one of four justices to file a dissenting opinion in Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. (1895), which struck down a federal income tax levied by the Wilson–Gorman Tariff Act of 1894. Harlan described the majority opinion as a "disaster to the country" because it "impairs and cripples the just powers of the national government."[40] He was the sole dissenter in another 1895 case, United States v. E. C. Knight Co., in which the Court severely curtailed the power of the federal government to pursue antitrust actions under the Sherman Antitrust Act. In his dissent, he wrote that "the common government of all the people is the only one that can adequately deal with a matter which directly and injuriously affects the entire commerce of the country."[41] During the 1890s, he also wrote several dissents in cases where Court decisions curtailed the regulatory powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC).[42]

Plessy v. Ferguson edit

 
John Marshall Harlan

In 1896, Associate Justice Henry Billings Brown delivered the majority decision in Plessy v. Ferguson, which established the doctrine of "separate but equal." Whereas the Civil Rights Cases had struck down a federal law barring segregation by private actors, the Court's opinion in Plessy allowed state governments to engage in segregation.[43] Rejecting the argument that segregation violated the Thirteenth Amendment, Brown wrote that "a statute which implies merely a legal distinction between the white and colored races has no tendency to destroy the legal equality of the two races, or reestablish a state of involuntary servitude." In response to the plaintiff's claims regarding the Fourteenth Amendment, Brown wrote that the Fourteenth Amendment was designed to "enforce the absolute equality of the two races before the law," but added that the amendment "could not have been intended to abolish distinction based upon color, or to enforce social, as distinguished from political, equality, or a commingling of the two races upon terms unsatisfactory to either."[44]

Harlan, the lone dissenting justice, strongly disapproved of the majority opinion, writing that "the judgement this day rendered, will, in time, prove to be quite as pernicious as the decision made by this tribunal in the Dred Scott Case." He accepted the appellant's argument that the Thirteenth Amendment barred segregation in public accommodations, as he believed that segregation imposed "badges of slavery or servitude" upon African Americans. He also accepted the appellant's argument that the segregation in public accommodations violated the Fourteenth Amendment on the basis that these accommodations constituted "public highway[s]."[45] He further wrote that "our Constitution is color-blind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens." Harlan rejected the idea that the law in question was race-neutral, writing that "everyone knows that the statute in question [was intended] to exclude colored people from coaches occupied by or assigned to white persons," adding that the law was "cunningly devised" to overturn the results of the Civil War.[46]

Later cases, 1897–1911 edit

Harlan did not embrace the idea of full social racial equality. While he had appeared to advocate for equality among those of different races and for a color-blind Constitution, in his Plessy dissent, he also stated "[t]here is a race so different from our own that we do not permit those belonging to it to become citizens of the United States.... I allude to the Chinese race." In United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898), Harlan joined Chief Justice Fuller's dissent proclaiming the dangers of having large numbers of Chinese immigrants in the United States.[47] The Court's holding was that persons of Chinese descent born in the United States were citizens by birth. Fuller and Harlan argued that the principle of jus sanguinis (that is, the concept of a child inheriting their father's citizenship by descent regardless of birthplace) had been more pervasive in U.S. legal history since independence.[48][49] In the view of the minority, excessive reliance on jus soli (birthplace) as the principal determiner of citizenship would lead to an untenable state of affairs in which "the children of foreigners, happening to be born to them while passing through the country, whether of royal parentage or not, or whether of the Mongolian, Malay or other race, were eligible to the presidency, while children of our citizens, born abroad, were not".[50]

Harlan was also the most staunchly anti-imperialist justice of the Supreme Court,[citation needed] arguing consistently in the Insular Cases (from 1901 to 1905) that the Constitution did not permit the demarcation of different rights between citizens of the states and the residents of newly acquired territories in the Philippines, Hawaii, Guam, and Puerto Rico, a view that was consistently in the minority.[51] In Hawaii v. Mankichi (1903) his opinion stated: "If the principles now announced should become firmly established, the time may not be far distant when, under the exactions of trade and commerce, and to gratify an ambition to become the dominant power in all the earth, the United States will acquire territories in every direction... whose inhabitants will be regarded as 'subjects' or 'dependent peoples,' to be controlled as Congress may see fit... which will engraft on our republican institutions a colonial system entirely foreign to the genius of our Government and abhorrent to the principles that underlie and pervade our Constitution."

Harlan delivered the majority opinion in Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Co. v. City of Chicago (1897), holding that due process required fair compensation to be given for any private property seized by the state. The decision incorporated the Fifth Amendment's Takings Clause, representing the first time that part of the Bill of Rights was applied to state governments. The Court would not incorporate another provision of the Bill of Rights until Gitlow v. New York (1925).[citation needed] Harlan wrote the majority opinion in Northern Securities Co. v. United States, the first time the Court upheld the use of the Sherman Antitrust Act to break up a large corporation.[52] Harlan also wrote the majority opinion in Adair v. United States (1908), holding that Congress did not have the power to ban "yellow-dog contracts".[citation needed]

During his final years on the Court, Harlan continued to write dissents in major cases, such as Giles v. Harris (1903), a case challenging the use of grandfather clauses to restrict voting rolls and de facto exclude blacks. He also dissented in Lochner v. New York (1905), but he agreed with the majority "that there is a liberty of contract which cannot be violated even under the sanction of direct legislative enactment." In his dissent in Hodges v. United States (1906), Harlan reiterated his belief that the Thirteenth Amendment empowered Congress to protect African Americans from discrimination and violence. He was the lone dissenter in Ex parte Young (1908), arguing that the Eleventh Amendment prevented suits against state officials acting on behalf of the state.[citation needed] In his partial dissent in the 1911 case of Standard Oil Company of New Jersey v. United States, Harlan argued against the Court's establishment of the rule of reason, which held that in some extenuating circumstances a trust should not be broken up even if it has a monopoly.[52] In both Standard Oil and United States v. American Tobacco Co. (1911), Harlan strongly criticized the majority opinion for adopting the rule of reason; as the rule was not present in the original legislation, he believed that the Court was usurping Congress's legislative prerogatives.[53]

Death edit

Harlan died on October 14, 1911, after 33 years serving on the Supreme Court, the third-longest tenure on the court up to that time and sixth-longest ever. He was the last veteran of the Waite Court to remain on the bench. He was buried in Rock Creek Cemetery, Washington, D.C., where his body resides along with those of three other justices.[54][55] Harlan, who suffered from financial problems throughout his tenure on the Court, left minimal assets for the support of his widow, Malvina Shanklin Harlan, and two unmarried daughters. In the months following Harlan's death, leading members of the Supreme Court Bar established a fund for the benefit of the Harlan survivors.[56]

Personal life edit

Family edit

In December 1856, Harlan married Malvina French Shanklin, the daughter of an Indiana businessman.[57] According to friends and Shanklin's memoirs, theirs was a happy marriage, which lasted until Harlan's death. They had six children, three sons and three daughters. Their eldest son, Richard, became a Presbyterian minister and served as president of Lake Forest College. Their second son, James S. Harlan, practiced in Chicago and served as attorney general of Puerto Rico and chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Their youngest son, John Maynard Harlan, also practiced in Chicago and served as an alderman. John Maynard's son, John Marshall Harlan II, served as a Supreme Court Associate Justice from 1955 until 1971.[58]

Religious beliefs edit

Harlan was fervently religious, and legal scholar James W. Gordon argued that his faith ”was the most important lens through which he viewed the people and events of his life”.[59] A conservative Presbyterian,[60] he favored the Old School branch of that denomination, opposed higher criticism, and stridently adhered to Calvinism.[59][61] During his tenure as a justice, he was an elder at the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C.,[62] and there he taught a Sunday school class of middle-aged men from 1896 until his death in 1911.[9][62]

Legacy edit

 
Harlan's gravesite

Harlan was largely forgotten in the decades after his death, but his reputation began to improve in the mid-twentieth century, and many scholars now consider him to be one of the greatest Supreme Court justices of his era.[63][64] He is most known for his reputation as the "Great Dissenter," and he is especially remembered for his dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson.[65] Historian D. Grier Stephenson writes that "more than any justice with whom he served, Harlan understood the Reconstruction Amendments to establish a nationally protected right against racial discrimination, although it is a measure of the Court that he frequently articulated those promises in dissent."[66] Legal scholar Bernard Schwartz writes that "Harlan's key dissents have generally been affirmed in the court of history. A century later, his rejection of the narrow view toward civil rights adopted by the Court majority has been generally approved."[67] Harlan's view that the Fourteenth Amendment made the provisions of the Bill of Rights applicable to the states has also largely been adopted by the Supreme Court.[68][b]

Harlan is commemorated by John Marshall Harlan Community Academy High School, a Chicago public high school,[69] as well as by John Marshall Harlan High School in Texas.[70] During World War II the Liberty ship SS John M. Harlan was built and named in his honor.[71] Centre College, Harlan's alma mater, instituted the John Marshall Harlan Professorship in Government in 1994 in honor of Harlan's reputation as one of the Supreme Court's greatest justices.[72] Named for Justice Harlan, the "Harlan Scholars" of the University of Louisville/Louis D. Brandeis School of Law is an undergraduate organization for students interested in attending law school.[73] Collections of Harlan's papers are at the University of Louisville and at the Library of Congress in Washington. Other papers are collected at many other libraries.[74]

On March 12, 1906, Harlan donated a King James Version Bible to the Supreme Court.[75] This Bible had become known as the "Harlan Bible", and as of 2015, has been signed by every succeeding Supreme Court justice after taking the oath of office.[75]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ During the 1860s, Harlan was a member of several ephemeral unionist parties separate from both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party. In 1867, he ran as a Conservative Union Democrat, competing against candidates nominated by the Democratic Party and the Republican Party.[20]
  2. ^ Harlan favored the total incorporation of the Bill of Rights, but the Supreme Court has instead selectively incorporated the Bill of Rights on a case-by-case basis.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 30–31
  2. ^ Luxenberg (2019), p. 33
  3. ^ Beth, Loren P. (1992). John Marshall Harlan: The Last Whig Justice. University Press of Kentucky. p. 7. Retrieved March 19, 2024.
  4. ^ Eventful Life of Robert Harlan, The Cincinnati Enquirer (Cincinnati, Ohio), September 22, 1897, p. 6. accessed August 5, 2016 at https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6123842/eventful_life_of_robert_harlan_the/ September 8, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Sennanov, Danzy (November 23, 2014). "Review: 'A Chosen Exile', by Allyson Hobbs". The New York Times. from the original on April 19, 2015. Retrieved April 4, 2015.
  6. ^ a b Beth (1992), pp. 7–8, 13–17.
  7. ^ "John M. Harlan". Oyez Project. Chicago-Kent College of Law. from the original on September 14, 2016. Retrieved July 14, 2016.
  8. ^ "John Marshall Harlan, 1877–1911". Supreme Court Historical Society. from the original on November 18, 2015. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  9. ^ a b "Harlan, John Marshall". American National Biography Online. from the original on December 4, 2015. Retrieved October 24, 2015.
  10. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 34–35
  11. ^ Beth (1992), pp. 18–19, 29–37.
  12. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 38–39, 44, 108
  13. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 115–116
  14. ^ Luxenberg (2019), p. 119
  15. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 122–124
  16. ^ Beth (1992), pp. 38–68.
  17. ^ Beth (1992), pp. 68–80.
  18. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 194–196
  19. ^ Luxenberg (2019), p. 202
  20. ^ a b Luxenberg (2019), pp. 206–209
  21. ^ a b c Beth (1992), pp. 81–109.
  22. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 209–210
  23. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 211–213
  24. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 284–288
  25. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 281–282, 289–290
  26. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 290–291
  27. ^ a b Beth (1992), pp. 110–113, 119–129.
  28. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 298–299
  29. ^ "Justices 1789 to Present". Washington, D.C.: Supreme Court of the United States. Retrieved February 17, 2022.
  30. ^ a b Beth (1992), pp. 134–137, 143–145.
  31. ^ Ely (2012), p. 28
  32. ^ Beth (1992), pp. 137–139, 158–159.
  33. ^ Pratt (1999), p. 25
  34. ^ White (1975), pp. 2–3
  35. ^ White (1975), pp. 5–6
  36. ^ White (1975), pp. 11, 20–21
  37. ^ Shoemaker (2004), p. 16
  38. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 346–348
  39. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 352–355
  40. ^ Schwartz (1995), p. 185
  41. ^ Stephenson (2003), p. 116
  42. ^ Shoemaker (2004), p. 39
  43. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 478, 484
  44. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 478–479
  45. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 483–484
  46. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 485–486
  47. ^ Maggs, Gregory (2011). Constitutional Law A Contemporary Approach. US: West. p. 682. ISBN 978-0-314-27355-0.
  48. ^ Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.S. at 709.
  49. ^ Glen, Patrick J. (Fall 2007). "Wong Kim Ark and Sentencia que Declara Constitucional la Ley General de Migración 285-04 in Comparative Perspective: Constitutional Interpretation, Jus Soli Principles, and Political Morality". University of Miami Inter-American Law Review. 39 (1): 77. JSTOR 40176768.
  50. ^ United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.S. 649, 715 (1898).
  51. ^ Beth (1992), p. 250.
  52. ^ a b Shoemaker (2004), pp. 38–39
  53. ^ Pratt (1999), pp. 39–42
  54. ^ . Archived from the original on September 3, 2005. Retrieved November 24, 2013. Supreme Court Historical Society at Internet Archive.
  55. ^ See also, Christensen, George A., Here Lies the Supreme Court: Revisited, Journal of Supreme Court History, Volume 33 Issue 1, pp. 17–41 (February 19, 2008), University of Alabama.
  56. ^ Matetsky, Ira Brad (Autumn 2012). "The Harlan Fund" (PDF). The Green Bag. p. 23. (PDF) from the original on January 13, 2013. Retrieved November 25, 2012.
  57. ^ Luxenberg (2019), pp. 32–33, 45
  58. ^ Beth (1992), pp. 22–23, 188–189.
  59. ^ a b Gordon, James W. (Winter 2001). "Religion and the First Justice Harlan: A Case Study in Late Nineteenth Century Presbyterian Constitutionalism". Marquette Law Review. 85 (2): 317–422.
  60. ^ Beth (1992), p. 149
  61. ^ Przybyszewski (1999), p. 57
  62. ^ a b Przybyszewski (1999), p. 48.
  63. ^ White (1975), p. 1
  64. ^ Beth (1992), pp. 1–2.
  65. ^ King, Gilbert (December 20, 2011). "The Great Dissenter and His Half-Brother". Smithsonian. from the original on May 24, 2019. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  66. ^ Stephenson (2003), p. 114
  67. ^ Schwartz (1995), p. 163
  68. ^ Stephenson (2003), p. 115
  69. ^ "Harlan Community Academy". harlanfalcons.org. from the original on April 11, 2012. Retrieved August 30, 2012.
  70. ^ Foster-Frau, Silvia (October 11, 2017). "New Northside ISD high school celebrates its namesake". San Antonio Express-News. from the original on November 26, 2017. Retrieved November 27, 2017.
  71. ^ Williams, Greg H. (2014). The Liberty Ships of World War II: A Record of the 2,710 Vessels and Their Builders, Operators and Namesakes, with a History of the Jeremiah O'Brien. McFarland. ISBN 978-1476617541. from the original on October 14, 2021. Retrieved December 9, 2017.
  72. ^ . Centre College. March 5, 2009. Archived from the original on December 15, 2009. Retrieved December 10, 2009.
  73. ^ "Office of Admissions". louisville.edu. from the original on July 10, 2015. Retrieved July 20, 2015.
  74. ^ . United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Archived from the original on January 19, 2009.
  75. ^ a b White, Darrell (March 12, 2008). "'Harlan Bible' Day – March 12 (1906)". American Judicial Alliance. from the original on August 12, 2015. Retrieved October 24, 2015.

Works cited edit

  • Beth, Loren P. (1992). John Marshall Harlan: The Last Whig Justice. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1778-X.
  • Ely, James W. Jr. (2012). The Chief Justiceship of Melville W. Fuller, 1888–1910. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 9781611171716.
  • Luxenberg, Steve (2019). Separate: The Story of Plessy v. Ferguson, and America's Journey from Slavery to Segregation. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393239379.
  • Pratt, Walter F. (1999). The Supreme Court Under Edward Douglass White, 1910–1921. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 9781570033094.
  • Przybyszewski, Linda (1999). The Republic According to John Marshall Harlan. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-4789-5.
  • Schwarz, Bernard (1995). A History of the Supreme Court. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195093872.
  • Shoemaker, Rebecca S. (2004). The White Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781576079737.
  • Stephenson, D. Grier (2003). The Waite Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781576078297.
  • White, G. Edward (1975). "John Marshall Harlan I: The Precursor". The American Journal of Legal History. 19 (1): 1–21. doi:10.2307/844579. JSTOR 844579.

Further reading edit

  • Abraham, Henry J. (1992). Justices and Presidents: A Political History of Appointments to the Supreme Court (3rd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-506557-3.
  • Canellos, Peter S. (2021). The Great Dissenter: The Story of John Marshall Harlan, America's Judicial Hero. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781501188206.; online review July 1, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • Cushman, Clare (2001). The Supreme Court Justices: Illustrated Biographies, 1789–1995 (2nd ed.). (Supreme Court Historical Society, Congressional Quarterly Books). ISBN 1-56802-126-7.
  • Frank, John P. (1995). Friedman, Leon; Israel, Fred L. (eds.). The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions. Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 0-7910-1377-4.
  • Hall, Kermit L., ed. (1992). The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-505835-6.
  • Hartz, Louis (January 1940). . Filson Club History Quarterly. 14 (1). Archived from the original on May 2, 2012. Retrieved November 30, 2011.
  • King, Willard L. (1950). Melville Weston Fuller: Chief Justice of the United States 1888–1910. New York: The Macmillan Company.
  • Latham, Frank B. (1970). The Great Dissenter: Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan, 1833–1911. New York: Cowles Book Company. ISBN 9780402141419.
  • Stephenson, D. Grier (2003). The Waite Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781576078297.
  • Urofsky, Melvin I. (1994). The Supreme Court Justices: A Biographical Dictionary. New York: Garland Publishing. p. 590. ISBN 0-8153-1176-1.
  • Yarbrough, Tinsley E. (1995). Judicial Enigma: the First Justice Harlan. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195074642.

External links edit

  • Chin, Gabriel J. (1999). (PDF). Akron Law Review. 33 (629). University of Akron. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 11, 2012. Retrieved May 17, 2010.
  • Oyez Project, U.S. Supreme Court Multimedia – John M. Harlan.
  • , Sixth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals.
  • . The Supreme Court Historical Society. Archived from the original on November 18, 2015. Retrieved October 29, 2015. Includes official portrait
  • "The John Marshall Harlan Collection". Louis D. Brandeis School of Law. University of Louisville. Retrieved July 20, 2015.
  • at Centre College.
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of Kentucky
1875
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by Attorney General of Kentucky
1863–1867
Succeeded by
John Rodman
Preceded by Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
1877–1911
Succeeded by

john, marshall, harlan, this, article, about, world, united, states, supreme, court, justice, grandson, 20th, century, holder, same, position, great, dissenter, redirects, here, australian, judge, with, same, nickname, michael, kirby, judge, june, 1833, octobe. This article is about the pre World War I United States Supreme Court justice For his grandson the mid 20th century holder of the same position see John Marshall Harlan II The Great Dissenter redirects here For the Australian judge with the same nickname see Michael Kirby judge John Marshall Harlan June 1 1833 October 14 1911 was an American lawyer and politician who served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1877 until his death in 1911 He is often called The Great Dissenter due to his many dissents in cases that restricted civil liberties including the Civil Rights Cases Plessy v Ferguson and Giles v Harris Many of Harlan s views expressed in his notable dissents would become the official view of the Supreme Court starting from the 1950s Warren Court and onward John Marshall HarlanAssociate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United StatesIn office December 10 1877 October 14 1911Nominated byRutherford B HayesPreceded byDavid DavisSucceeded byMahlon PitneyAttorney General of KentuckyIn office September 1 1863 September 3 1867GovernorThomas BramlettePreceded byAndrew JamesSucceeded byJohn RodmanPersonal detailsBorn 1833 06 01 June 1 1833Boyle County Kentucky U S DiedOctober 14 1911 1911 10 14 aged 78 Washington D C U S Resting placeRock Creek CemeteryWashington D C U S Political partyWhig before 1854 Know Nothing 1854 1858 Opposition 1858 1860 Constitutional Union 1860 Unionist 1861 1867 Republican 1868 1911 SpouseMalvina Shanklin m 1856 wbr RelationsJohn Marshall Harlan II grandson Robert James Harlan brother Children6 including James and John MaynardParentsJames Harlan father Elizabeth Davenport mother EducationCentre College BA Transylvania UniversitySignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited StatesBranch serviceUnited States ArmyYears of service1861 1863RankColonelUnit10th Kentucky InfantryBattles warsAmerican Civil WarBorn into a prominent slave holding family near Danville Kentucky Harlan experienced a quick rise to political prominence When the American Civil War broke out Harlan strongly supported the Union and recruited the 10th Kentucky Infantry Despite his opposition to the Emancipation Proclamation he served in the war until 1863 when he was elected attorney general of Kentucky Harlan lost his re election bid in 1867 and joined the Republican Party in the following year quickly emerging as the leader of the Kentucky Republican Party In 1877 President Rutherford B Hayes appointed Harlan to the Supreme Court Harlan s jurisprudence was marked by his life long belief in a strong national government his sympathy for the economically disadvantaged and his view that the Reconstruction Amendments had fundamentally transformed the relationship between the federal government and the state governments He was the sole dissenter in both the Civil Rights Cases 1883 and Plessy v Ferguson 1896 which permitted state and private actors to engage in segregation He also wrote dissents in major cases such as Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co 1895 which struck down a federal income tax United States v E C Knight Co 1895 which severely limited the power of the federal government to pursue antitrust actions Lochner v New York 1905 which invalidated a state law setting maximum working hours on the basis of substantive due process and Standard Oil Co of New Jersey v United States 1911 which established the rule of reason He was the first Supreme Court justice to advocate the incorporation of the Bill of Rights and his majority opinion in Chicago Burlington amp Quincy Railroad Co v City of Chicago 1897 incorporated the Takings Clause Harlan was largely forgotten in the decades after his death but many scholars now consider him to be one of the greatest Supreme Court justices of his era His grandson John Marshall Harlan II later served on Supreme Court from 1955 to 1971 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Politician and lawyer 2 1 Rise 1851 1863 2 2 Party leader 1863 1877 3 Supreme Court Justice 3 1 Nomination 3 2 Life on the Court 3 3 Jurisprudence 3 3 1 Earlier cases 1877 1896 3 3 2 Plessy v Ferguson 3 3 3 Later cases 1897 1911 4 Death 5 Personal life 5 1 Family 5 2 Religious beliefs 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Works cited 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education editHarlan was born in 1833 at Harlan s Station 5 miles 8 0 km west of Danville Kentucky on Salt River Road He was born into a prominent slaveholding family whose earliest members had settled in the region in 1779 Harlan s father was James Harlan a lawyer and prominent Whig politician who represented Kentucky in the United States House of Representatives and served as Secretary of State of Kentucky Harlan s mother Elizabeth nee Davenport was the daughter of a pioneer from Virginia citation needed Harlan grew up on the family estate near Frankfort Kentucky 1 He was named after Chief Justice of the United States John Marshall whom his father admired 2 The first ancestor of the Harlan family was George Harlan an Englishman who arrived to the American Colony of Pennsylvania in the 1600s 3 John had several older brothers including a mixed race half brother Robert James Harlan born in 1816 into slavery and whom his father raised in his own household and had tutored by Richard and James Harlan two of John Marshall Harlan s older brothers 4 According to historian Allyson Hobbs Robert became highly successful making a fortune in the California Gold Rush before returning east and settling in Cincinnati Ohio 5 He remained close to the other Harlans she suggests this might have influenced his half brother John Marshall Harlan who argued on behalf of equal rights under the law in Plessy v Ferguson 5 After attending school in Frankfort John Harlan enrolled at Centre College He was a member of Beta Theta Pi and graduated with honors Though his mother wanted Harlan to become a merchant James insisted that his son follow him into the legal profession and Harlan joined his father s law practice in 1852 6 While James Harlan could have trained his son in the office as was the norm of reading the law in that era he sent John to attend law school at Transylvania University in 1850 where George Robertson and Thomas Alexander Marshall were among his instructors 6 Harlan finished his legal education in his father s law office 7 and was admitted to the Kentucky Bar in 1853 8 9 Politician and lawyer editRise 1851 1863 edit See also Kentucky in the American Civil War A member of the Whig Party like his father Harlan got an early start in politics when in 1851 he was offered the post of adjutant general of the state by governor John L Helm 10 He served in the post for the next eight years which gave him a statewide presence and familiarity with many of Kentucky s leading political figures With the Whig Party s dissolution in the early 1850s Harlan shifted his affiliation to the Know Nothings despite his discomfort with their opposition to Catholicism Harlan s personal popularity within the state was such that he was able to survive the decline of the Know Nothing movement in the late 1850s winning election in 1858 as the county judge for Franklin County Kentucky The following year he renounced his allegiance to the Know Nothings and joined the state s Opposition Party serving as their candidate in an unsuccessful attempt to defeat Democrat William E Simms for the seat in Kentucky s 8th congressional district 11 Throughout the 1850s Harlan criticized both abolitionists and pro slavery radicals 12 Like many other anti secession Southerners he supported the Constitutional Union ticket of John Bell and Edward Everett in the 1860 presidential election Harlan agreed to serve as a presidential elector for Bell and he delivered speeches on behalf of the party throughout Kentucky during the campaign 13 In the secession crisis that followed Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln s victory in the 1860 election Harlan sought to prevent Kentucky from seceding He wrote several pro Union editorials represented the Union in state court and joined a militia known as the Crittenden Union Zouaves 14 After the state legislature voted to expel all Confederate forces from the state Harlan recruited a company that was mustered into the service as the 10th Kentucky Infantry 15 Harlan served in the Western Theater of the American Civil War until the death of his father James in February 1863 At that time Harlan resigned his commission as colonel and returned to Frankfort to support his family 16 Party leader 1863 1877 edit Weeks after leaving the army Harlan was nominated by the Union Party to run for Attorney General of Kentucky Campaigning on a platform of vigorous prosecution of the war he won the election by a considerable margin As attorney general for the state Harlan issued legal opinions and advocated for the state in a number of court cases Party politics however occupied much of his time 17 Though still a committed unionist he opposed Lincoln s Emancipation Proclamation and supported Democratic candidate George B McClellan s unsuccessful campaign in the 1864 presidential election 18 Harlan also opposed ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment attacking it as a direct interference by a portion of the states with the local concerns of other states 19 After the end of the Civil War in 1865 Harlan initially refused to join either the Democratic Party which he viewed as too accepting of former rebels or the Republican Party whose Reconstruction policies he opposed He sought re election in 1867 on a third party ticket a but lost his office in a Democratic sweep of the state In the aftermath of his defeat Harlan joined the Republican Party and he supported Ulysses S Grant s candidacy in the 1868 presidential election 20 Moving to Louisville Harlan formed a successful partnership with John E Newman a former circuit court judge and like Harlan a Unionist turned Republican 21 In 1870 Harlan and Newman briefly took on a new partner Benjamin Bristow but President Grant appointed Bristow as U S solicitor general later that year 22 While growing his legal practice Harlan also worked to build up the Republican Party organization in the state 21 He served as the Republican nominee for governor of Kentucky in 1871 though he finished a distant second to incumbent Democratic Governor Preston Leslie Harlan nonetheless established himself as the leader of the Kentucky Republican Party during the campaign 23 Harlan s views on Reconstruction shifted in the early 1870s and he came to support Reconstruction measures such as the Enforcement Act of 1870 though he still opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1875 as a federal overreach 24 Harlan reluctantly accepted the party s gubernatorial nomination in 1875 and he once again lost by a substantial margin this time to Democrat James B McCreary 25 The following year Harlan worked to nominate Bristow at the 1876 Republican National Convention seeking to position Bristow as a more electable alternative to Republican front runner James G Blaine 26 When Rutherford B Hayes instead emerged as the compromise candidate Harlan switched his delegation s votes and subsequently campaigned on Hayes behalf in the 1876 election 21 Supreme Court Justice edit nbsp The Supreme Court headed by Melville Fuller 1898 with Harlan in the front row second from leftNomination edit See also Presidency of Rutherford B Hayes Judicial appointments Though Harlan was considered for several positions in the new administration most notably Attorney General initially the only job he was offered was as a member of a commission sent to Louisiana to resolve disputed statewide elections there Justice David Davis however had resigned from the Supreme Court in January 1877 after being elected to the Senate by the Illinois General Assembly 27 Seeking to appoint a Southerner to the Supreme Court in the aftermath of the acrimonious and disputed 1876 presidential election Hayes settled on Harlan 28 Though Harlan s nomination prompted some criticism from Republican Stalwarts he was confirmed unanimously by the Senate on November 29 1877 27 and took the judicial oath of office on December 10 1877 29 Life on the Court edit Harlan greatly enjoyed his time as a justice serving until his death in 1911 From the start he established good relationships with his fellow justices and he was close friends with a number of them 30 Though Harlan often disagreed with the other justices occasionally quite vociferously he was able to separate differences over legal matters from personal relationship 31 During his tenure money problems continually plagued him particularly as he began to put his three sons through college Debt was a constant concern and in the early 1880s he considered resigning from the Court and returning to private practice He ultimately decided to remain on the Court but supplemented his income by teaching constitutional law at the Columbian Law School which later became the George Washington University Law School 30 When Harlan began his service the Supreme Court faced a heavy workload that consisted primarily of diversity and removal cases with only a few constitutional issues Justices also rode circuit in the various federal judicial circuits though these usually corresponded to the region from which the justice was appointed due to his junior status Harlan was assigned the Seventh Circuit based in Chicago Harlan rode the Seventh Circuit until 1896 when he switched to his home circuit the Sixth upon the death of its previous holder Justice Howell Edmunds Jackson 32 Harlan became the senior associate justice on the Court following the retirement of Stephen Johnson Field in 1897 and he served as acting chief justice after the death of Melville Fuller in 1910 33 Jurisprudence edit See also Waite Court Fuller Court and White Court judges During Harlan s tenure on the Supreme Court major Supreme Court decisions tended to address issues arising from industrialization and the Reconstruction Amendments Beginning in the 1880s the Supreme Court increasingly began to adopt a laissez faire philosophy striking down economic regulations while at the same time allowing states to curtail the rights of African Americans 34 Harlan differed from many of his colleagues often voting to uphold federal regulations and to protect the civil rights of African Americans 35 His judicial opinions were influenced by his life long belief in a strong national government his sympathy for the economically disadvantaged and his view that the Reconstruction Amendments had fundamentally transformed the relationship between the federal government and the state governments 36 Though Harlan believed the Court had the power to review state and federal actions on a broad array of topics he tended to oppose judicial activism in favor of deference to legislatures 37 Earlier cases 1877 1896 edit Congress had passed the Civil Rights Act of 1875 in the waning days of Reconstruction outlawing segregation in public accommodations such as railroads The Supreme Court did not rule on the Civil Rights Act of 1875 until 1883 when it struck down the law in Civil Rights Cases 38 In his majority opinion Justice Joseph P Bradley held that the Thirteenth Amendment simply abolished slavery and that the Fourteenth Amendment did not authorize Congress to bar racial discrimination by private actors Only Harlan dissented vigorously charging that the majority had subverted the Reconstruction Amendments The substance and spirit of the recent amendments of the constitution have been sacrificed by a subtle and ingenious verbal criticism Harlan argued that the Fourteenth Amendment gave Congress the authority to regulate public accommodations and further argued that the Thirteenth Amendment empowered Congress to eradicate the vestiges of slavery such as restrictions on freedom of movement 39 Harlan joined the Court s unanimous decision in Pace v Alabama 1883 which ruled that anti miscegenation laws were constitutional Harlan was the first justice to argue that the Fourteenth Amendment incorporated the Bill of Rights making rights guarantees applicable to the individual states in Hurtado v California 1884 citation needed Harlan was one of four justices to file a dissenting opinion in Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co 1895 which struck down a federal income tax levied by the Wilson Gorman Tariff Act of 1894 Harlan described the majority opinion as a disaster to the country because it impairs and cripples the just powers of the national government 40 He was the sole dissenter in another 1895 case United States v E C Knight Co in which the Court severely curtailed the power of the federal government to pursue antitrust actions under the Sherman Antitrust Act In his dissent he wrote that the common government of all the people is the only one that can adequately deal with a matter which directly and injuriously affects the entire commerce of the country 41 During the 1890s he also wrote several dissents in cases where Court decisions curtailed the regulatory powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission ICC 42 Plessy v Ferguson edit nbsp John Marshall HarlanIn 1896 Associate Justice Henry Billings Brown delivered the majority decision in Plessy v Ferguson which established the doctrine of separate but equal Whereas the Civil Rights Cases had struck down a federal law barring segregation by private actors the Court s opinion in Plessy allowed state governments to engage in segregation 43 Rejecting the argument that segregation violated the Thirteenth Amendment Brown wrote that a statute which implies merely a legal distinction between the white and colored races has no tendency to destroy the legal equality of the two races or reestablish a state of involuntary servitude In response to the plaintiff s claims regarding the Fourteenth Amendment Brown wrote that the Fourteenth Amendment was designed to enforce the absolute equality of the two races before the law but added that the amendment could not have been intended to abolish distinction based upon color or to enforce social as distinguished from political equality or a commingling of the two races upon terms unsatisfactory to either 44 Harlan the lone dissenting justice strongly disapproved of the majority opinion writing that the judgement this day rendered will in time prove to be quite as pernicious as the decision made by this tribunal in the Dred Scott Case He accepted the appellant s argument that the Thirteenth Amendment barred segregation in public accommodations as he believed that segregation imposed badges of slavery or servitude upon African Americans He also accepted the appellant s argument that the segregation in public accommodations violated the Fourteenth Amendment on the basis that these accommodations constituted public highway s 45 He further wrote that our Constitution is color blind and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens Harlan rejected the idea that the law in question was race neutral writing that everyone knows that the statute in question was intended to exclude colored people from coaches occupied by or assigned to white persons adding that the law was cunningly devised to overturn the results of the Civil War 46 Later cases 1897 1911 edit Harlan did not embrace the idea of full social racial equality While he had appeared to advocate for equality among those of different races and for a color blind Constitution in his Plessy dissent he also stated t here is a race so different from our own that we do not permit those belonging to it to become citizens of the United States I allude to the Chinese race In United States v Wong Kim Ark 1898 Harlan joined Chief Justice Fuller s dissent proclaiming the dangers of having large numbers of Chinese immigrants in the United States 47 The Court s holding was that persons of Chinese descent born in the United States were citizens by birth Fuller and Harlan argued that the principle of jus sanguinis that is the concept of a child inheriting their father s citizenship by descent regardless of birthplace had been more pervasive in U S legal history since independence 48 49 In the view of the minority excessive reliance on jus soli birthplace as the principal determiner of citizenship would lead to an untenable state of affairs in which the children of foreigners happening to be born to them while passing through the country whether of royal parentage or not or whether of the Mongolian Malay or other race were eligible to the presidency while children of our citizens born abroad were not 50 Harlan was also the most staunchly anti imperialist justice of the Supreme Court citation needed arguing consistently in the Insular Cases from 1901 to 1905 that the Constitution did not permit the demarcation of different rights between citizens of the states and the residents of newly acquired territories in the Philippines Hawaii Guam and Puerto Rico a view that was consistently in the minority 51 In Hawaii v Mankichi 1903 his opinion stated If the principles now announced should become firmly established the time may not be far distant when under the exactions of trade and commerce and to gratify an ambition to become the dominant power in all the earth the United States will acquire territories in every direction whose inhabitants will be regarded as subjects or dependent peoples to be controlled as Congress may see fit which will engraft on our republican institutions a colonial system entirely foreign to the genius of our Government and abhorrent to the principles that underlie and pervade our Constitution Harlan delivered the majority opinion in Chicago Burlington amp Quincy Railroad Co v City of Chicago 1897 holding that due process required fair compensation to be given for any private property seized by the state The decision incorporated the Fifth Amendment s Takings Clause representing the first time that part of the Bill of Rights was applied to state governments The Court would not incorporate another provision of the Bill of Rights until Gitlow v New York 1925 citation needed Harlan wrote the majority opinion in Northern Securities Co v United States the first time the Court upheld the use of the Sherman Antitrust Act to break up a large corporation 52 Harlan also wrote the majority opinion in Adair v United States 1908 holding that Congress did not have the power to ban yellow dog contracts citation needed During his final years on the Court Harlan continued to write dissents in major cases such as Giles v Harris 1903 a case challenging the use of grandfather clauses to restrict voting rolls and de facto exclude blacks He also dissented in Lochner v New York 1905 but he agreed with the majority that there is a liberty of contract which cannot be violated even under the sanction of direct legislative enactment In his dissent in Hodges v United States 1906 Harlan reiterated his belief that the Thirteenth Amendment empowered Congress to protect African Americans from discrimination and violence He was the lone dissenter in Ex parte Young 1908 arguing that the Eleventh Amendment prevented suits against state officials acting on behalf of the state citation needed In his partial dissent in the 1911 case of Standard Oil Company of New Jersey v United States Harlan argued against the Court s establishment of the rule of reason which held that in some extenuating circumstances a trust should not be broken up even if it has a monopoly 52 In both Standard Oil and United States v American Tobacco Co 1911 Harlan strongly criticized the majority opinion for adopting the rule of reason as the rule was not present in the original legislation he believed that the Court was usurping Congress s legislative prerogatives 53 Death editHarlan died on October 14 1911 after 33 years serving on the Supreme Court the third longest tenure on the court up to that time and sixth longest ever He was the last veteran of the Waite Court to remain on the bench He was buried in Rock Creek Cemetery Washington D C where his body resides along with those of three other justices 54 55 Harlan who suffered from financial problems throughout his tenure on the Court left minimal assets for the support of his widow Malvina Shanklin Harlan and two unmarried daughters In the months following Harlan s death leading members of the Supreme Court Bar established a fund for the benefit of the Harlan survivors 56 Personal life editFamily edit In December 1856 Harlan married Malvina French Shanklin the daughter of an Indiana businessman 57 According to friends and Shanklin s memoirs theirs was a happy marriage which lasted until Harlan s death They had six children three sons and three daughters Their eldest son Richard became a Presbyterian minister and served as president of Lake Forest College Their second son James S Harlan practiced in Chicago and served as attorney general of Puerto Rico and chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commission Their youngest son John Maynard Harlan also practiced in Chicago and served as an alderman John Maynard s son John Marshall Harlan II served as a Supreme Court Associate Justice from 1955 until 1971 58 Religious beliefs edit Harlan was fervently religious and legal scholar James W Gordon argued that his faith was the most important lens through which he viewed the people and events of his life 59 A conservative Presbyterian 60 he favored the Old School branch of that denomination opposed higher criticism and stridently adhered to Calvinism 59 61 During his tenure as a justice he was an elder at the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington D C 62 and there he taught a Sunday school class of middle aged men from 1896 until his death in 1911 9 62 Legacy edit nbsp Harlan s gravesiteHarlan was largely forgotten in the decades after his death but his reputation began to improve in the mid twentieth century and many scholars now consider him to be one of the greatest Supreme Court justices of his era 63 64 He is most known for his reputation as the Great Dissenter and he is especially remembered for his dissent in Plessy v Ferguson 65 Historian D Grier Stephenson writes that more than any justice with whom he served Harlan understood the Reconstruction Amendments to establish a nationally protected right against racial discrimination although it is a measure of the Court that he frequently articulated those promises in dissent 66 Legal scholar Bernard Schwartz writes that Harlan s key dissents have generally been affirmed in the court of history A century later his rejection of the narrow view toward civil rights adopted by the Court majority has been generally approved 67 Harlan s view that the Fourteenth Amendment made the provisions of the Bill of Rights applicable to the states has also largely been adopted by the Supreme Court 68 b Harlan is commemorated by John Marshall Harlan Community Academy High School a Chicago public high school 69 as well as by John Marshall Harlan High School in Texas 70 During World War II the Liberty ship SS John M Harlan was built and named in his honor 71 Centre College Harlan s alma mater instituted the John Marshall Harlan Professorship in Government in 1994 in honor of Harlan s reputation as one of the Supreme Court s greatest justices 72 Named for Justice Harlan the Harlan Scholars of the University of Louisville Louis D Brandeis School of Law is an undergraduate organization for students interested in attending law school 73 Collections of Harlan s papers are at the University of Louisville and at the Library of Congress in Washington Other papers are collected at many other libraries 74 On March 12 1906 Harlan donated a King James Version Bible to the Supreme Court 75 This Bible had become known as the Harlan Bible and as of 2015 has been signed by every succeeding Supreme Court justice after taking the oath of office 75 See also edit nbsp Law portal nbsp American Civil War portalList of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States List of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States Seat 8 List of United States Supreme Court justices by time in office United States Supreme Court cases during the Fuller Court United States Supreme Court cases during the Waite Court United States Supreme Court cases during the White CourtNotes edit During the 1860s Harlan was a member of several ephemeral unionist parties separate from both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party In 1867 he ran as a Conservative Union Democrat competing against candidates nominated by the Democratic Party and the Republican Party 20 Harlan favored the total incorporation of the Bill of Rights but the Supreme Court has instead selectively incorporated the Bill of Rights on a case by case basis References editCitations edit Luxenberg 2019 pp 30 31 Luxenberg 2019 p 33 Beth Loren P 1992 John Marshall Harlan The Last Whig Justice University Press of Kentucky p 7 Retrieved March 19 2024 Eventful Life of Robert Harlan The Cincinnati Enquirer Cincinnati Ohio September 22 1897 p 6 accessed August 5 2016 at https www newspapers com clip 6123842 eventful life of robert harlan the Archived September 8 2018 at the Wayback Machine a b Sennanov Danzy November 23 2014 Review A Chosen Exile by Allyson Hobbs The New York Times Archived from the original on April 19 2015 Retrieved April 4 2015 a b Beth 1992 pp 7 8 13 17 John M Harlan Oyez Project Chicago Kent College of Law Archived from the original on September 14 2016 Retrieved July 14 2016 John Marshall Harlan 1877 1911 Supreme Court Historical Society Archived from the original on November 18 2015 Retrieved October 29 2015 a b Harlan John Marshall American National Biography Online Archived from the original on December 4 2015 Retrieved October 24 2015 Luxenberg 2019 pp 34 35 Beth 1992 pp 18 19 29 37 Luxenberg 2019 pp 38 39 44 108 Luxenberg 2019 pp 115 116 Luxenberg 2019 p 119 Luxenberg 2019 pp 122 124 Beth 1992 pp 38 68 Beth 1992 pp 68 80 Luxenberg 2019 pp 194 196 Luxenberg 2019 p 202 a b Luxenberg 2019 pp 206 209 a b c Beth 1992 pp 81 109 Luxenberg 2019 pp 209 210 Luxenberg 2019 pp 211 213 Luxenberg 2019 pp 284 288 Luxenberg 2019 pp 281 282 289 290 Luxenberg 2019 pp 290 291 a b Beth 1992 pp 110 113 119 129 Luxenberg 2019 pp 298 299 Justices 1789 to Present Washington D C Supreme Court of the United States Retrieved February 17 2022 a b Beth 1992 pp 134 137 143 145 Ely 2012 p 28 Beth 1992 pp 137 139 158 159 Pratt 1999 p 25 White 1975 pp 2 3 White 1975 pp 5 6 White 1975 pp 11 20 21 Shoemaker 2004 p 16 Luxenberg 2019 pp 346 348 Luxenberg 2019 pp 352 355 Schwartz 1995 p 185 Stephenson 2003 p 116 Shoemaker 2004 p 39 Luxenberg 2019 pp 478 484 Luxenberg 2019 pp 478 479 Luxenberg 2019 pp 483 484 Luxenberg 2019 pp 485 486 Maggs Gregory 2011 Constitutional Law A Contemporary Approach US West p 682 ISBN 978 0 314 27355 0 Wong Kim Ark 169 U S at 709 Glen Patrick J Fall 2007 Wong Kim Ark and Sentencia que Declara Constitucional la Ley General de Migracion 285 04 in Comparative Perspective Constitutional Interpretation Jus Soli Principles and Political Morality University of Miami Inter American Law Review 39 1 77 JSTOR 40176768 United States v Wong Kim Ark 169 U S 649 715 1898 Beth 1992 p 250 a b Shoemaker 2004 pp 38 39 Pratt 1999 pp 39 42 Christensen George A 1983 Here Lies the Supreme Court Gravesites of the Justices Yearbook Archived from the original on September 3 2005 Retrieved November 24 2013 Supreme Court Historical Society at Internet Archive See also Christensen George A Here Lies the Supreme Court Revisited Journal of Supreme Court History Volume 33 Issue 1 pp 17 41 February 19 2008 University of Alabama Matetsky Ira Brad Autumn 2012 The Harlan Fund PDF The Green Bag p 23 Archived PDF from the original on January 13 2013 Retrieved November 25 2012 Luxenberg 2019 pp 32 33 45 Beth 1992 pp 22 23 188 189 a b Gordon James W Winter 2001 Religion and the First Justice Harlan A Case Study in Late Nineteenth Century Presbyterian Constitutionalism Marquette Law Review 85 2 317 422 Beth 1992 p 149 Przybyszewski 1999 p 57 a b Przybyszewski 1999 p 48 White 1975 p 1 Beth 1992 pp 1 2 King Gilbert December 20 2011 The Great Dissenter and His Half Brother Smithsonian Archived from the original on May 24 2019 Retrieved May 24 2019 Stephenson 2003 p 114 Schwartz 1995 p 163 Stephenson 2003 p 115 Harlan Community Academy harlanfalcons org Archived from the original on April 11 2012 Retrieved August 30 2012 Foster Frau Silvia October 11 2017 New Northside ISD high school celebrates its namesake San Antonio Express News Archived from the original on November 26 2017 Retrieved November 27 2017 Williams Greg H 2014 The Liberty Ships of World War II A Record of the 2 710 Vessels and Their Builders Operators and Namesakes with a History of the Jeremiah O Brien McFarland ISBN 978 1476617541 Archived from the original on October 14 2021 Retrieved December 9 2017 Centre s John Marshall Harlan praised as civil rights pioneer Centre College March 5 2009 Archived from the original on December 15 2009 Retrieved December 10 2009 Office of Admissions louisville edu Archived from the original on July 10 2015 Retrieved July 20 2015 John Marshall Harlan Location of papers Bibliography and Biography United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit Archived from the original on January 19 2009 a b White Darrell March 12 2008 Harlan Bible Day March 12 1906 American Judicial Alliance Archived from the original on August 12 2015 Retrieved October 24 2015 Works cited edit Beth Loren P 1992 John Marshall Harlan The Last Whig Justice Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 1778 X Ely James W Jr 2012 The Chief Justiceship of Melville W Fuller 1888 1910 University of South Carolina Press ISBN 9781611171716 Luxenberg Steve 2019 Separate The Story of Plessy v Ferguson and America s Journey from Slavery to Segregation W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393239379 Pratt Walter F 1999 The Supreme Court Under Edward Douglass White 1910 1921 University of South Carolina Press ISBN 9781570033094 Przybyszewski Linda 1999 The Republic According to John Marshall Harlan Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4789 5 Schwarz Bernard 1995 A History of the Supreme Court Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195093872 Shoemaker Rebecca S 2004 The White Court Justices Rulings and Legacy ABC CLIO ISBN 9781576079737 Stephenson D Grier 2003 The Waite Court Justices Rulings and Legacy ABC CLIO ISBN 9781576078297 White G Edward 1975 John Marshall Harlan I The Precursor The American Journal of Legal History 19 1 1 21 doi 10 2307 844579 JSTOR 844579 Further reading editAbraham Henry J 1992 Justices and Presidents A Political History of Appointments to the Supreme Court 3rd ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 506557 3 Canellos Peter S 2021 The Great Dissenter The Story of John Marshall Harlan America s Judicial Hero New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9781501188206 online review Archived July 1 2021 at the Wayback Machine Cushman Clare 2001 The Supreme Court Justices Illustrated Biographies 1789 1995 2nd ed Supreme Court Historical Society Congressional Quarterly Books ISBN 1 56802 126 7 Frank John P 1995 Friedman Leon Israel Fred L eds The Justices of the United States Supreme Court Their Lives and Major Opinions Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 0 7910 1377 4 Hall Kermit L ed 1992 The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 505835 6 Hartz Louis January 1940 John M Harlan in Kentucky 1855 1877 Filson Club History Quarterly 14 1 Archived from the original on May 2 2012 Retrieved November 30 2011 King Willard L 1950 Melville Weston Fuller Chief Justice of the United States 1888 1910 New York The Macmillan Company Latham Frank B 1970 The Great Dissenter Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan 1833 1911 New York Cowles Book Company ISBN 9780402141419 Stephenson D Grier 2003 The Waite Court Justices Rulings and Legacy ABC CLIO ISBN 9781576078297 Urofsky Melvin I 1994 The Supreme Court Justices A Biographical Dictionary New York Garland Publishing p 590 ISBN 0 8153 1176 1 Yarbrough Tinsley E 1995 Judicial Enigma the First Justice Harlan Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195074642 External links editJohn Marshall Harlan at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges a publication of the Federal Judicial Center John Marshall Harlan at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource Chin Gabriel J 1999 The First Justice Harlan by the Numbers Just How Great Was the Great Dissenter PDF Akron Law Review 33 629 University of Akron Archived from the original PDF on January 11 2012 Retrieved May 17 2010 Oyez Project U S Supreme Court Multimedia John M Harlan John Marshall Harlan Bibliography Biography and location of papers Sixth Circuit U S Court of Appeals John Marshall Harlan 1877 1911 The Supreme Court Historical Society Archived from the original on November 18 2015 Retrieved October 29 2015 Includes official portrait The John Marshall Harlan Collection Louis D Brandeis School of Law University of Louisville Retrieved July 20 2015 Centre s John Marshall Harlan praised as civil rights pioneer March 5 2009 at Centre College Party political officesPreceded byGeorge M Thomas Republican nominee for Governor of Kentucky1875 Succeeded byWalter EvansLegal officesPreceded byAndrew James Attorney General of Kentucky1863 1867 Succeeded byJohn RodmanPreceded byDavid Davis Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States1877 1911 Succeeded byMahlon Pitney Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Marshall Harlan amp oldid 1217245251, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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