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John McLean

John McLean (March 11, 1785 – April 4, 1861) was an American jurist and politician who served in the United States Congress, as U.S. Postmaster General, and as a justice of the Ohio and U.S. Supreme Courts. He was often discussed for the Whig Party nominations for president, and is also one of the few people who served in all three branches of government.

John McLean
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
In office
March 12, 1829 – April 4, 1861
Nominated byAndrew Jackson
Preceded byRobert Trimble
Succeeded byNoah Swayne
United States Postmaster General
In office
June 26, 1823 – March 4, 1829
PresidentJames Monroe
John Quincy Adams
Preceded byReturn Meigs
Succeeded byWilliam Barry
Commissioner of the General Land Office
In office
September 11, 1822 – June 26, 1823
PresidentJames Monroe
Preceded byJosiah Meigs
Succeeded byGeorge Graham
Associate Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court
In office
February 17, 1816 – September 11, 1822
Preceded byWilliam Irvin
Succeeded byCharles Sherman
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Ohio's 1st district
In office
March 4, 1813 – October 8, 1816
Preceded byJeremiah Morrow
Succeeded byWilliam Henry Harrison
Personal details
Born(1785-03-11)March 11, 1785
Morris County, New Jersey, U.S.
DiedApril 4, 1861(1861-04-04) (aged 76)
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic-Republican (before 1825)
National Republican (1825–1828)
Democratic (1828–1831)
Anti-Masonic (1831–1838)
Whig (1838–1848)
Free Soil (1848–1854)
Republican (1854–1861)
Other political
affiliations
Jacksonian
Spouses
Rebecca Edwards
(m. 1807; died 1841)
Sarah Ludlow
(m. 1843)
Children6
EducationHarvard University

Born in New Jersey, McLean lived in several frontier towns before settling in Ridgeville, Ohio. He founded The Western Star, a weekly newspaper, and established a law practice. He won election to the United States House of Representatives, serving from 1813 until his election to the Ohio Supreme Court in 1816. He resigned from that position to accept appointment to the administration of President James Monroe, becoming the United States Postmaster General in 1823. Under Monroe and President John Quincy Adams, McLean presided over a major expansion of the United States Postal Service. In 1829, President Andrew Jackson appointed McLean as an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court.

On the court, McLean became known as an opponent of slavery, and he was frequently mentioned as a presidential candidate for various parties. McLean received the support of delegates at the 1848 Whig National Convention, the 1856 Republican National Convention, and the 1860 Republican National Convention. He was the sole dissenter in the fugitive slave case of Prigg v. Pennsylvania and one of two justices to dissent in the landmark case of Dred Scott v. Sandford. McLean served on the court until his death in 1861.

Early years edit

McLean was born in Morris County, New Jersey, the son of Fergus McLean and Sophia Blackford. After living in a succession of frontier towns, namely Morgantown, Virginia, Nicholasville, Kentucky, and Maysville, Kentucky, his family settled in Ridgeville, Warren County, Ohio in 1797. There, McLean received his formal education and developed his interest in law, later graduating from Harvard in 1806. It can be argued that his anti-slavery views also began to form at this time, given his upbringing as an evangelical Methodist with a focus on egalitarianism. However, while living in Ohio, Mclean was recorded in the 1820 United States census as owning at least one slave.[1] His brother William was also a successful Ohio politician.

McLean studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1807. That same year, he founded The Western Star, a weekly newspaper at Lebanon, the Warren County seat. In 1810, Mclean transferred ownership of the Star to his brother Nathaniel and hung up his shingle, beginning to practice law as an individual lawyer for the first time. He was elected to the U.S. House for the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Congresses, serving from March 4, 1813, until he resigned in 1816 to take a seat on the Ohio Supreme Court, to which he had been elected on February 17, 1816, replacing William W. Irvin.

The State of Ohio v. Thomas D. Carneal edit

State v. Carneal, which occurred during McLean's tenure on the Ohio Supreme Court, foreshadowed McLean's future dissent in an important fugitive slavery case, Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857). In it, a black man named Richard Lunsford, a Kentucky slave, applied for a writ of habeas corpus to obtain freedom from his owner, Thomas D. Carneal. The Ohio Constitution of 1802 forbade slavery in the state, and at issue was whether slaves owned by a man traveling in Ohio became free once they traveled to Ohio and whether a slave who resided in Kentucky could be sent to work in Ohio without gaining his freedom. Lunsford, as a slave who was regularly sent to work in Ohio, sued on the grounds that, by having him travel to work in Cincinnati for periods of over a week, Thomas Carneal forfeited his property rights in Lunsford. The Court ruled, with McLean issuing its opinion, that since Carneal sold Lunsford to a Mr. James Riddle, the man who sent Lunsford to Cincinnati, he did in fact forfeit his right to be Lunsford's owner. The most notable portion of this case was McLean's opinion, which highlighted his personal distaste for the institution of slavery: "Were it proper to consider it, the Court, as well as from the principles recognized by our Constitution and Laws, could not hesitate in declaring that SLAVERY [emphasis in original], except for the punishment of crimes, is an infringement upon the sacred rights of man: Rights, which he derives from his Creator, and which are inalienable."[2]

Executive branch service edit

 
Portrait of John McLean

He resigned his judgeship in 1822 to take President James Monroe's appointment to be Commissioner of the United States General Land Office, serving until 1823, when Monroe appointed him United States Postmaster General. McLean served in that post from December 9, 1823, to March 7, 1829, under Monroe and John Quincy Adams, presiding over a massive expansion of the Post Office into the new western states and territories and the elevation of the Postmaster Generalship to a cabinet office.

During Adams' administration McLean supported Vice President John C. Calhoun, who was estranged from the president, but Adams declined to remove McLean despite Secretary of State Henry Clay asking for his removal.[3]

Supreme Court appointment and tenure edit

While Postmaster General, McLean supported Andrew Jackson, who offered him the posts of Secretary of War and Secretary of the Navy. McLean declined both and was instead appointed to the Supreme Court by Jackson on March 6, 1829, to a seat vacated by Robert Trimble. McLean was confirmed by the United States Senate on March 7, 1829, receiving his commission the same day. He was sworn into office on March 12.[4]

Known as "The Politician on the Supreme Court," he associated himself with every party on the political spectrum, moving from a Jacksonian Democrat, to the Anti-Jackson Democrats, the Anti-Masonic Party, the Whigs, the Free Soilers, and finally the Republicans. For this reason he has been characterized as a "political opportunist" whose political affiliations varied.[5] McLean was touted as a potential Whig presidential candidate throughout the 1830s-40s. President John Tyler offered him the post of Secretary of War, but he declined. Because of his anti-slavery-extension positions, he was considered by the new Republican party as a presidential candidate in 1856, but the nomination went to John C. Frémont. McLean sought the presidency again in 1860 despite turning 75 that March. He won twelve votes on the first ballot at the Republican convention; Abraham Lincoln ultimately was nominated.

Groves v. Slaughter edit

McLean's tendency toward economic nationalism can be seen in cases such as Groves v. Slaughter, 40 U.S. 449 (1841). In this case, McLean upheld the right of Mississippi to restrict the introduction of slaves from other states. Though it was "not necessary" to the decision, McLean restated his nationalism by holding that the power to regulate commerce rested exclusively with Congress. "The necessity of a uniform commercial regulation, more than any other consideration, led to the adoption of the federal Constitution. And unless the power be not only paramount, but exclusive, the Constitution must fail to attain one of the principal objects of its formation," McLean wrote.[6]

Groves v. Slaughter concerned a Mississippi man who had bought some slaves but believed that he could escape without paying the slave-trader due to a clause in the Mississippi constitution that seemed to forbid the importation of slaves for in-state sale after a certain date. For the Court, the issue became whether Congress possessed an exclusive right to regulate interstate commerce. If so, did it follow that states could not constitutionally regulate the slave trade? Moreover, should the Court answer in the affirmative, on what basis could a state abolish slavery? McLean, seeking to limit national regulation in regards to slavery, paradoxically abandoned his aforementioned position as an economic nationalist when he claimed, "The power over slavery belongs to the States respectively. It is local in its character and in its effects."[7] This was of course done in accordance with the Free Soil fear that, if the states lost their power to regulate slavery, what was to stop its spread into the free North? McLean held that the States should be given the right to protect themselves from the "avarice and intrusion of the slave dealer."[7] All of this he contended while holding the aforementioned view, which demonstrates his tortured reconciliation of two neo-Federalist political biases, which in this case contradict: one favoring an expansive national government, the other condemning slavery.

Prigg v. Pennsylvania edit

In Prigg v. Pennsylvania (1842), McLean dissented. By his reasoning, it was necessary for Prigg to take Morgan to court to demonstrate that she was, in fact, a slave.[8] As such Prigg did not have the legal pretext to remove Morgan from the state of Pennsylvania, without first gaining judicial approval. A court had to decide that Morgan was technically a slave for Prigg to have the authority to transport her across state lines. McLean suggests that this process was the only way to be fair to the slave, the owner, the free state, and the slaveholding state from which the slave came, stating that "[his] opinion, therefore, does not rest so much upon the particular law of Pennsylvania, as upon the inherent and sovereign power of a state, to protect its jurisdiction and the peace of its citizens, in any and every mode which its discretion shall dictate, which shall not conflict with a defined power of the federal government."[9]

Passenger Cases edit

McLean's sense of nationalism could be seen again in his concurring opinion on the Passenger Cases (1849). The most senior member of the Court at the time, McLean began his opinion by weighing in on the debate concerning the nature of the Commerce Clause. McLean asserted the Commerce Clause "is exclusively vested in Congress." Under this view, if the federal government does not regulate a particular area of foreign or interstate commerce, it means that federal policy maintains that such an area should remain unregulated, not that states should have the right to impose individual regulations. To McLean, only one authority could exercise any given power, and the judicial task was to determine whether a particular subject fell within a power delegated to the federal government or within a power reserved to the States. McLean denied that the States could exercise a power unless the federal government chose to exercise the same power, at which point state regulation would be trumped by federal action. Although McLean recognized that both Congress and the States could impose a tax on the same object, he insisted these respective taxes result from the exercise of distinct powers, and did not represent any concurrent exercise of the same power.

Dred Scott v. Sandford edit

In Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), he was one of two dissenting Justices to the majority vote, the other being Justice Benjamin Robbins Curtis. Justice McLean cited Marie Louise v. Marot, an 1835 freedom suit appealed to the Louisiana Supreme Court in which Presiding Judge George Mathews, Jr. stated that "[b]eing free for one moment...it was not in the power of [the plaintiff's] former owner to reduce her again to slavery."[10] In opposition to the majority ruling that African-Americans cannot and were not intended to be citizens under the US Constitution, McLean argued that they had already the right to vote in five states.[11] His strong dissenting views are believed to have forced the hand of Chief Justice Roger Brooke Taney into a harsher and more polarizing opinion than he originally planned. To the argument that "a colored citizen would not be an agreeable member of society," McLean responded, "This is more a matter of taste than of law."

Wheaton v. Peters edit

He also wrote the Court's opinion denying there was a common-law copyright in American law in Wheaton v. Peters.

Societies edit

During the 1820s, McLean was a member of the prestigious Columbian Institute for the Promotion of Arts and Sciences, who counted among their members former presidents Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams and many prominent men of the day, including well-known representatives of the military, government service, medical and other professions.[12]

Death and legacy edit

 
John McLean grave at Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati OH

McLean became the last surviving member of the Monroe and Quincy Adams Cabinets. He died in Cincinnati, Ohio, and was buried in Spring Grove Cemetery there.[13] Also interred there is Stanley Matthews, another associate justice.[14][15] as well as chief justice Salmon P. Chase.

During the American Civil War, Camp John McLean, a Union Army training camp in Cincinnati, was named in his honor. His son (and Cincinnati native), Nathaniel C. McLean (1815–1905), was a Union general in the American Civil War. His daughter Evelyn McLean married Joseph Pannell Taylor, brother of U.S. President Zachary Taylor.

See also edit

Notes edit

  • Thomas E. Carney. "The Political Judge: Justice John McLean Pursuit of the Presidency. Ohio History. v. 111. Summer/Autumn 2002. 121+
  • Francis Phelphs Weisenberger. The Life of John McLean, A Politician On the United States Supreme Court. Columbus, Ohio: The Ohio State University Press, 1937
  • John McLean at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a publication of the Federal Judicial Center.
  • United States Congress. "John McLean (id: M000549)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.

References edit

  1. ^ "More than 1,800 congressmen once enslaved Black people. This is who they were, and how they shaped the nation". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 4, 2023.
  2. ^ "John Mclean". The Supreme Court of Ohio & The Ohio Judicial System. from the original on December 10, 2015. Retrieved December 1, 2015.
  3. ^ Howe 2007, p. 255.
  4. ^ "Justices 1789 to Present". Washington, D.C.: Supreme Court of the United States. Retrieved February 3, 2022.
  5. ^ "John McLean". Oyez Project. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  6. ^ 40 U.S. 449, 504
  7. ^ a b 40 U.S. 449, 508
  8. ^ Finkelman, Paul (1994). "Story Telling on the Supreme Court: Prigg v. Pennsylvania and Justice Joseph Story's Judicial Nationalism". Supreme Court Review. 1994 (1): 247–94. doi:10.1086/scr.1994.3109649. S2CID 56432249.
  9. ^ 41 U.S. 539, 672
  10. ^ Friedman, Joel William (2009) Champion of Civil Rights: Judge John Minor Wisdom. LSU Press: Southern Biography Series. p 24. June 6, 2020, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 4, 2012.
  11. ^ "Dred Scott v. Sandford". Oyez. from the original on November 24, 2015. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  12. ^ Rathbun, Richard (1904). The Columbian institute for the promotion of arts and sciences: A Washington Society of 1816–1838. Bulletin of the United States National Museum, October 18, 1917. from the original on November 9, 2021. Retrieved June 20, 2010.
  13. ^ Dickinson College Archives December 13, 2017, at the Wayback Machine. McLean had delivered the dedication address at the cemetery. Alfred L. Brophy, The Road to the Gettysburg Address, Florida State University Law Review 43 (2016): 831, 846. November 24, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Christensen, George A. "Here Lies the Supreme Court: Gravesites of the Justices" September 3, 2005, at the Wayback Machine. Supreme Court Historical Society(1983) Yearbook].
  15. ^ Christensen, George A., "Here Lies the Supreme Court: Revisited", Journal of Supreme Court History, Volume 33 Issue 1, Pages 17–41 (Feb 19, 2008), University of Alabama,

Works cited edit

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.
  • 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.
  • Finkelman, Paul (2009). "John McLean: Moderate Abolitionist and Supreme Court Politician". Vanderbilt Law Review. 62: 519–65.
  • Flanders, Henry. The Lives and Times of the Chief Justices of the United States Supreme Court. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co., 1874 at Google Books.
  • 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.
  • Martin, Fenton S.; Goehlert, Robert U. (1990). The U.S. Supreme Court: A Bibliography. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Books. ISBN 0-87187-554-3.
  • Urofsky, Melvin I. (1994). The Supreme Court Justices: A Biographical Dictionary. New York: Garland Publishing. pp. 590. ISBN 0-8153-1176-1.
  • White, G. Edward. The Marshall Court & Cultural Change, 1815–35. Published in an abridged edition, 1991.

External links edit

U.S. House of Representatives
New constituency Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Ohio's 1st congressional district

1813–1816
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the House Accounts Committee
1815–1816
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by Associate Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court
1816–1822
Succeeded by
Preceded by Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
1829–1861
Succeeded by
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Preceded by Commissioner of the General Land Office
1822–1823
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Preceded by United States Postmaster General
1823–1829
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john, mclean, justice, mclean, redirects, here, mississippi, supreme, court, justice, william, campbell, mclean, other, people, named, disambiguation, march, 1785, april, 1861, american, jurist, politician, served, united, states, congress, postmaster, general. Justice McLean redirects here For the Mississippi Supreme Court justice see William Campbell McLean For other people named John McLean see John McLean disambiguation John McLean March 11 1785 April 4 1861 was an American jurist and politician who served in the United States Congress as U S Postmaster General and as a justice of the Ohio and U S Supreme Courts He was often discussed for the Whig Party nominations for president and is also one of the few people who served in all three branches of government John McLeanDaguerreotype by Mathew Brady c 1849Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United StatesIn office March 12 1829 April 4 1861Nominated byAndrew JacksonPreceded byRobert TrimbleSucceeded byNoah SwayneUnited States Postmaster GeneralIn office June 26 1823 March 4 1829PresidentJames MonroeJohn Quincy AdamsPreceded byReturn MeigsSucceeded byWilliam BarryCommissioner of the General Land OfficeIn office September 11 1822 June 26 1823PresidentJames MonroePreceded byJosiah MeigsSucceeded byGeorge GrahamAssociate Justice of the Ohio Supreme CourtIn office February 17 1816 September 11 1822Preceded byWilliam IrvinSucceeded byCharles ShermanMember of the U S House of Representatives from Ohio s 1st districtIn office March 4 1813 October 8 1816Preceded byJeremiah MorrowSucceeded byWilliam Henry HarrisonPersonal detailsBorn 1785 03 11 March 11 1785Morris County New Jersey U S DiedApril 4 1861 1861 04 04 aged 76 Cincinnati Ohio U S Political partyDemocratic Republican before 1825 National Republican 1825 1828 Democratic 1828 1831 Anti Masonic 1831 1838 Whig 1838 1848 Free Soil 1848 1854 Republican 1854 1861 Other politicalaffiliationsJacksonianSpousesRebecca Edwards m 1807 died 1841 wbr Sarah Ludlow m 1843 wbr Children6EducationHarvard University Born in New Jersey McLean lived in several frontier towns before settling in Ridgeville Ohio He founded The Western Star a weekly newspaper and established a law practice He won election to the United States House of Representatives serving from 1813 until his election to the Ohio Supreme Court in 1816 He resigned from that position to accept appointment to the administration of President James Monroe becoming the United States Postmaster General in 1823 Under Monroe and President John Quincy Adams McLean presided over a major expansion of the United States Postal Service In 1829 President Andrew Jackson appointed McLean as an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court On the court McLean became known as an opponent of slavery and he was frequently mentioned as a presidential candidate for various parties McLean received the support of delegates at the 1848 Whig National Convention the 1856 Republican National Convention and the 1860 Republican National Convention He was the sole dissenter in the fugitive slave case of Prigg v Pennsylvania and one of two justices to dissent in the landmark case of Dred Scott v Sandford McLean served on the court until his death in 1861 Contents 1 Early years 2 The State of Ohio v Thomas D Carneal 3 Executive branch service 4 Supreme Court appointment and tenure 4 1 Groves v Slaughter 4 2 Prigg v Pennsylvania 4 3 Passenger Cases 4 4 Dred Scott v Sandford 4 5 Wheaton v Peters 5 Societies 6 Death and legacy 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Works cited 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly years editMcLean was born in Morris County New Jersey the son of Fergus McLean and Sophia Blackford After living in a succession of frontier towns namely Morgantown Virginia Nicholasville Kentucky and Maysville Kentucky his family settled in Ridgeville Warren County Ohio in 1797 There McLean received his formal education and developed his interest in law later graduating from Harvard in 1806 It can be argued that his anti slavery views also began to form at this time given his upbringing as an evangelical Methodist with a focus on egalitarianism However while living in Ohio Mclean was recorded in the 1820 United States census as owning at least one slave 1 His brother William was also a successful Ohio politician McLean studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1807 That same year he founded The Western Star a weekly newspaper at Lebanon the Warren County seat In 1810 Mclean transferred ownership of the Star to his brother Nathaniel and hung up his shingle beginning to practice law as an individual lawyer for the first time He was elected to the U S House for the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Congresses serving from March 4 1813 until he resigned in 1816 to take a seat on the Ohio Supreme Court to which he had been elected on February 17 1816 replacing William W Irvin The State of Ohio v Thomas D Carneal editState v Carneal which occurred during McLean s tenure on the Ohio Supreme Court foreshadowed McLean s future dissent in an important fugitive slavery case Dred Scott v Sandford 1857 In it a black man named Richard Lunsford a Kentucky slave applied for a writ of habeas corpus to obtain freedom from his owner Thomas D Carneal The Ohio Constitution of 1802 forbade slavery in the state and at issue was whether slaves owned by a man traveling in Ohio became free once they traveled to Ohio and whether a slave who resided in Kentucky could be sent to work in Ohio without gaining his freedom Lunsford as a slave who was regularly sent to work in Ohio sued on the grounds that by having him travel to work in Cincinnati for periods of over a week Thomas Carneal forfeited his property rights in Lunsford The Court ruled with McLean issuing its opinion that since Carneal sold Lunsford to a Mr James Riddle the man who sent Lunsford to Cincinnati he did in fact forfeit his right to be Lunsford s owner The most notable portion of this case was McLean s opinion which highlighted his personal distaste for the institution of slavery Were it proper to consider it the Court as well as from the principles recognized by our Constitution and Laws could not hesitate in declaring that SLAVERY emphasis in original except for the punishment of crimes is an infringement upon the sacred rights of man Rights which he derives from his Creator and which are inalienable 2 Executive branch service edit nbsp Portrait of John McLean He resigned his judgeship in 1822 to take President James Monroe s appointment to be Commissioner of the United States General Land Office serving until 1823 when Monroe appointed him United States Postmaster General McLean served in that post from December 9 1823 to March 7 1829 under Monroe and John Quincy Adams presiding over a massive expansion of the Post Office into the new western states and territories and the elevation of the Postmaster Generalship to a cabinet office During Adams administration McLean supported Vice President John C Calhoun who was estranged from the president but Adams declined to remove McLean despite Secretary of State Henry Clay asking for his removal 3 Supreme Court appointment and tenure editWhile Postmaster General McLean supported Andrew Jackson who offered him the posts of Secretary of War and Secretary of the Navy McLean declined both and was instead appointed to the Supreme Court by Jackson on March 6 1829 to a seat vacated by Robert Trimble McLean was confirmed by the United States Senate on March 7 1829 receiving his commission the same day He was sworn into office on March 12 4 Known as The Politician on the Supreme Court he associated himself with every party on the political spectrum moving from a Jacksonian Democrat to the Anti Jackson Democrats the Anti Masonic Party the Whigs the Free Soilers and finally the Republicans For this reason he has been characterized as a political opportunist whose political affiliations varied 5 McLean was touted as a potential Whig presidential candidate throughout the 1830s 40s President John Tyler offered him the post of Secretary of War but he declined Because of his anti slavery extension positions he was considered by the new Republican party as a presidential candidate in 1856 but the nomination went to John C Fremont McLean sought the presidency again in 1860 despite turning 75 that March He won twelve votes on the first ballot at the Republican convention Abraham Lincoln ultimately was nominated Groves v Slaughter edit McLean s tendency toward economic nationalism can be seen in cases such as Groves v Slaughter 40 U S 449 1841 In this case McLean upheld the right of Mississippi to restrict the introduction of slaves from other states Though it was not necessary to the decision McLean restated his nationalism by holding that the power to regulate commerce rested exclusively with Congress The necessity of a uniform commercial regulation more than any other consideration led to the adoption of the federal Constitution And unless the power be not only paramount but exclusive the Constitution must fail to attain one of the principal objects of its formation McLean wrote 6 Groves v Slaughter concerned a Mississippi man who had bought some slaves but believed that he could escape without paying the slave trader due to a clause in the Mississippi constitution that seemed to forbid the importation of slaves for in state sale after a certain date For the Court the issue became whether Congress possessed an exclusive right to regulate interstate commerce If so did it follow that states could not constitutionally regulate the slave trade Moreover should the Court answer in the affirmative on what basis could a state abolish slavery McLean seeking to limit national regulation in regards to slavery paradoxically abandoned his aforementioned position as an economic nationalist when he claimed The power over slavery belongs to the States respectively It is local in its character and in its effects 7 This was of course done in accordance with the Free Soil fear that if the states lost their power to regulate slavery what was to stop its spread into the free North McLean held that the States should be given the right to protect themselves from the avarice and intrusion of the slave dealer 7 All of this he contended while holding the aforementioned view which demonstrates his tortured reconciliation of two neo Federalist political biases which in this case contradict one favoring an expansive national government the other condemning slavery Prigg v Pennsylvania edit In Prigg v Pennsylvania 1842 McLean dissented By his reasoning it was necessary for Prigg to take Morgan to court to demonstrate that she was in fact a slave 8 As such Prigg did not have the legal pretext to remove Morgan from the state of Pennsylvania without first gaining judicial approval A court had to decide that Morgan was technically a slave for Prigg to have the authority to transport her across state lines McLean suggests that this process was the only way to be fair to the slave the owner the free state and the slaveholding state from which the slave came stating that his opinion therefore does not rest so much upon the particular law of Pennsylvania as upon the inherent and sovereign power of a state to protect its jurisdiction and the peace of its citizens in any and every mode which its discretion shall dictate which shall not conflict with a defined power of the federal government 9 Passenger Cases edit McLean s sense of nationalism could be seen again in his concurring opinion on the Passenger Cases 1849 The most senior member of the Court at the time McLean began his opinion by weighing in on the debate concerning the nature of the Commerce Clause McLean asserted the Commerce Clause is exclusively vested in Congress Under this view if the federal government does not regulate a particular area of foreign or interstate commerce it means that federal policy maintains that such an area should remain unregulated not that states should have the right to impose individual regulations To McLean only one authority could exercise any given power and the judicial task was to determine whether a particular subject fell within a power delegated to the federal government or within a power reserved to the States McLean denied that the States could exercise a power unless the federal government chose to exercise the same power at which point state regulation would be trumped by federal action Although McLean recognized that both Congress and the States could impose a tax on the same object he insisted these respective taxes result from the exercise of distinct powers and did not represent any concurrent exercise of the same power Dred Scott v Sandford edit In Dred Scott v Sandford 1857 he was one of two dissenting Justices to the majority vote the other being Justice Benjamin Robbins Curtis Justice McLean cited Marie Louise v Marot an 1835 freedom suit appealed to the Louisiana Supreme Court in which Presiding Judge George Mathews Jr stated that b eing free for one moment it was not in the power of the plaintiff s former owner to reduce her again to slavery 10 In opposition to the majority ruling that African Americans cannot and were not intended to be citizens under the US Constitution McLean argued that they had already the right to vote in five states 11 His strong dissenting views are believed to have forced the hand of Chief Justice Roger Brooke Taney into a harsher and more polarizing opinion than he originally planned To the argument that a colored citizen would not be an agreeable member of society McLean responded This is more a matter of taste than of law Wheaton v Peters edit He also wrote the Court s opinion denying there was a common law copyright in American law in Wheaton v Peters Societies editDuring the 1820s McLean was a member of the prestigious Columbian Institute for the Promotion of Arts and Sciences who counted among their members former presidents Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams and many prominent men of the day including well known representatives of the military government service medical and other professions 12 Death and legacy edit nbsp John McLean grave at Spring Grove Cemetery Cincinnati OH McLean became the last surviving member of the Monroe and Quincy Adams Cabinets He died in Cincinnati Ohio and was buried in Spring Grove Cemetery there 13 Also interred there is Stanley Matthews another associate justice 14 15 as well as chief justice Salmon P Chase During the American Civil War Camp John McLean a Union Army training camp in Cincinnati was named in his honor His son and Cincinnati native Nathaniel C McLean 1815 1905 was a Union general in the American Civil War His daughter Evelyn McLean married Joseph Pannell Taylor brother of U S President Zachary Taylor See also editAbraham Lincoln s patent List of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States List of United States Supreme Court justices by time in office United States Supreme Court cases during the Marshall Court United States Supreme Court cases during the Taney CourtNotes editThomas E Carney The Political Judge Justice John McLean Pursuit of the Presidency Ohio History v 111 Summer Autumn 2002 121 1 Francis Phelphs Weisenberger The Life of John McLean A Politician On the United States Supreme Court Columbus Ohio The Ohio State University Press 1937 John McLean at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges a publication of the Federal Judicial Center United States Congress John McLean id M000549 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress References edit More than 1 800 congressmen once enslaved Black people This is who they were and how they shaped the nation The Washington Post Retrieved May 4 2023 John Mclean The Supreme Court of Ohio amp The Ohio Judicial System Archived from the original on December 10 2015 Retrieved December 1 2015 Howe 2007 p 255 Justices 1789 to Present Washington D C Supreme Court of the United States Retrieved February 3 2022 John McLean Oyez Project Retrieved June 13 2022 40 U S 449 504 a b 40 U S 449 508 Finkelman Paul 1994 Story Telling on the Supreme Court Prigg v Pennsylvania and Justice Joseph Story s Judicial Nationalism Supreme Court Review 1994 1 247 94 doi 10 1086 scr 1994 3109649 S2CID 56432249 41 U S 539 672 Friedman Joel William 2009 Champion of Civil Rights Judge John Minor Wisdom LSU Press Southern Biography Series p 24 Archived June 6 2020 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 4 2012 Dred Scott v Sandford Oyez Archived from the original on November 24 2015 Retrieved July 2 2020 Rathbun Richard 1904 The Columbian institute for the promotion of arts and sciences A Washington Society of 1816 1838 Bulletin of the United States National Museum October 18 1917 Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Retrieved June 20 2010 Dickinson College Archives Archived December 13 2017 at the Wayback Machine McLean had delivered the dedication address at the cemetery Alfred L Brophy The Road to the Gettysburg Address Florida State University Law Review 43 2016 831 846 Archived November 24 2016 at the Wayback Machine Christensen George A Here Lies the Supreme Court Gravesites of the Justices Archived September 3 2005 at the Wayback Machine Supreme Court Historical Society 1983 Yearbook Christensen George A Here Lies the Supreme Court Revisited Journal of Supreme Court History Volume 33 Issue 1 Pages 17 41 Feb 19 2008 University of Alabama Works cited editHowe Daniel 2007 What Hath God Wrought The Transformation of America 1815 1848 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507894 7 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John McLean 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 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 Finkelman Paul 2009 John McLean Moderate Abolitionist and Supreme Court Politician Vanderbilt Law Review 62 519 65 Flanders Henry The Lives and Times of the Chief Justices of the United States Supreme Court Philadelphia J B Lippincott amp Co 1874 at Google Books 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 Martin Fenton S Goehlert Robert U 1990 The U S Supreme Court A Bibliography Washington D C Congressional Quarterly Books ISBN 0 87187 554 3 Urofsky Melvin I 1994 The Supreme Court Justices A Biographical Dictionary New York Garland Publishing pp 590 ISBN 0 8153 1176 1 White G Edward The Marshall Court amp Cultural Change 1815 35 Published in an abridged edition 1991 External links edit John McLean Ohio History Central U S House of Representatives New constituency Member of the U S House of Representatives from Ohio s 1st congressional district1813 1816 Succeeded byWilliam Henry Harrison Preceded byNicholas Moore Chair of the House Accounts Committee1815 1816 Succeeded byPeter Little Legal offices Preceded byWilliam Irvin Associate Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court1816 1822 Succeeded byCharles Sherman Preceded byRobert Trimble Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States1829 1861 Succeeded byNoah Swayne Political offices Preceded byJosiah Meigs Commissioner of the General Land Office1822 1823 Succeeded byGeorge Graham Preceded byReturn Meigs United States Postmaster General1823 1829 Succeeded byWilliam Barry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John McLean amp oldid 1195082455, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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