Awards
Winner of the 2001 Jules and Frances Landry Award
Synopses & Reviews
John Marshall (17551835) was arguably the most important judicial figure in American history. As the fourth chief justice of the United States Supreme Court, serving from 1801 to 1835, he helped move the Court from the fringes of power to the epicenter of constitutional government. His great opinions in cases like
Marbury v. Madison and
McCulloch v. Maryland are still part of the working discourse of constitutional law in America. Drawing on a new and definitive edition of Marshalls papers, R. Kent Newmyer combines engaging narrative with new historiographical insights in a fresh interpretation of John Marshalls life in the law.
Newmyer vividly unfolds Marshalls early Virginia years his Americanization in Fauquier County before the Revolution, his decision to fight for independence as "a principled soldier," and his emergence as a constitutional nationalist in the 1780s. Marshalls experience as a Federalist politician and a leading Virginia lawyer during the 1790s, Newmyer argues, defined his ideas about judicial review and the role of the Supreme Court as a curb on party-based, states'-rights radicalism.
Perhaps best known for consolidating the authority of the Supreme Court, Marshall is revealed here to have been equally skilled at crafting law that supported the emerging American market economy. He waged a lifelong struggle against champions of states-rights constitutional theory, a struggle embodied in his personal and ideological rivalry with Thomas Jefferson.
More than the summation of Marshalls legal and institutional accomplishments, Newmyers impressive study captures the nuanced texture of the justices reasoning, the complexity of his mature jurisprudence, and the affinities and tensions between his system of law and the transformative age in which he lived. It substantiates Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.s view of Marshall as the most representative figure in American law.
Review
"As constitutional innovator, Chief Justice John Marshall was among the most important institution builders in American history. Better than anyone before, Kent Newmeyer illuminates the origins and scope of Marshall's contribution to establishing the Supreme Court as the ultimate constitutional check upon American capitalism and representative democracy. At last, Marshall has a biographer the great chief justice himself might have hoped for." Tony A. Freyer, author of Hugo L. Black and the Dilemma of American Liberalism
Review
"Newmyer's John Marshall and the Heroic Age of the Supreme Court....is the best study of Marshall yet to appear and one of the finest judicial biographies in American literature." G. Edward White, author of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes: Law and the Inner Self
Review
"[This is] the single best one-volume work ever written on John Marshall and far and away one of the five best judicial biographies of the past century." Kermit L. Hall, coeditor of The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States
About the Author
R. Kent Newmyer, professor of law and history at the University of Connecticut School of Law, is the author of Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story among other books.