Ebook {Epub PDF} John Marshall: The Man Who Made the Supreme Court by Richard Brookhiser






















 · As Brookhiser’s compact and balanced account makes clear, Marshall famously transformed the judicial branch into one fully equal to the president and Congress in Estimated Reading Time: 6 mins. Born in colonial Virginia, Marshall fought for American independence under George Washington, whom he revered as the beau ideal of a true republican and memorialized in a biography. “For the rest of his life,” Richard Brookhiser writes, “John Marshall saw Washington as his commander and himself as one of /5(). Books: John Marshall: The Man Who Made The Supreme Court. Basic Books, | ISBN John Marshall is the greatest judge in American history. As Chief Justice of the Supreme Court for thirty-four years—a record that still stands—he impressed, charmed, and defied colleagues, skeptics and enemies, transforming an institution to which the founding fathers had given .


A brief biography of a legendary chief justice. When John Marshall () was sworn in as chief justice in , writes National Review senior editor and biographer Brookhiser (Founders' Son: A Life of Abraham Lincoln, , etc.), the Supreme Court met in a small committee room of the U.S. Capitol under the House of Representatives, a strong indication that the judiciary was the weakest. Richard Brookhiser, Writer: John Marshall: The Man Who Made the Supreme Court. Richard Brookhiser is a writer, known for John Marshall: The Man Who Made the Supreme Court (), Rediscovering Alexander Hamilton () and The Party Heads (). He is married to Jeanne Safer. Richard Brookhiser argues in his newest tome that John Marshall "made the Supreme Court.". This might be an understatement. Marshall, more than any other man, is responsible for the way most Americans think about "checks and balances" and "separation of powers.". Marshall almost single-handily saved the independence of the Supreme.


As Brookhiser’s compact and balanced account makes clear, Marshall famously transformed the judicial branch into one fully equal to the president and Congress in stature and legitimacy. The Supreme Court stands at the middle of the American political arena, and Marshall is the man who put it there."―H.W. Brands, author of Heirs of the Founders "Brookhiser's John Marshall is an erudite and elegant tour through not only the great chief justice's life, but the beginnings of the United States and the nation's Supreme Court. With colorful portraits of members of the founding generation, and clear and insightful descriptions of the legal cases that that shaped the American. For better and for worse, he made the Supreme Court a pillar of American life. In John Marshall, award-winning biographer Richard Brookhiser vividly chronicles America's greatest judge and the world he made.

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