The John Marshall Project

JOHN MARSHALL: The "Man Who Made the Court Supreme"

John Marshall Image

"My gift of John Marshall to the people of the United States was the proudest act of my life. There is no act of my life on which I reflect with more pleasure."

John Adams, 1826

John Marshall of Virginia is acknowledged to be the greatest Chief Justice in American history. He was appointed by President John Adams during Adams's last weeks as President and served as Chief Justice of the United States through the presidencies of Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams and most of the two terms of Andrew Jackson. When he died in 1835 John Quincy Adams called Marshall "my father's greatest gift to his country."

He best known and most famour case is Marbury v. Madison, in which he estblished the right of the Court to “judicial review,” the power of the Court to rule on the constitutionality of federal laws. In that case he declared that the Constitution was “the supreme law of the land” and that therefore all subordinate law must conform to it.

This project asks you to review the essential facts of John Marshall's life, to read and discuss his best known decisions and to decide for yourself why Marshall is called the greatest Chief Justice in our history.

This project will acquaint you with the life and works of Chief Justice John Marshall, the “Great Chief Justice.”

Background:

John Marshall is not generally listed among the founding fathers of the United States because his major contribution came in the period immediately following that of the founding. Many believe that John Marshall was the first Chief Justice of United States, which is not quite true. In fact Marshall was the fourth man to hold that office, but he was the first justice who began to shape the court into its modern form. Some people confuse him with another Marshall, General George Catlett Marshall (another Virginian), author of the "Marshall Plan." Among those who know his work, John Marshall is extremely important. In a survey of lawyers and jurists done in the 1930s, Marshall was unanimously selected as the greatest Chief Justice in history.

The mere length of John Marshall's term is remarkable: It began in the waning days of the administration of John Adams and lasted through the administrations of Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, and through seven of the eight years of Andrew Jackson’s presidency. Marshall was Chief Justice of United States from 1801 to 1835, and during that time he authored 72 opinions, a number of which can be considered among the real founding documents of United States, or at the very least, among the documents which created the founding principles of the Supreme Court. One of his biographers titled his book “John Marshall: The Man Who Made the Court Supreme,” and the title is fitting.

If John Marshall not been Chief Justice during those formative years, the present state of the court’s place in the American government and its contributions to American freedom and liberty might well be defined very differently. In addition, the relationships among various segments of our political society—federal government branches, states, and lower courts—might also be very different. He was a judicial nationalist, and perhaps his greatest achievement was to define or extend the limits of federal power. Many people—Thomas Jefferson is certainly among them—would argue that John Marshall's influence was not a good thing. Although history has come down squarely in Marshall's favor, some of his decisions remain controversial.

Here is a brief chronology of John Marshall's life:

On February 4, 1801, John Marshall assumed the post of 4th Chief Justice of the United States, beginning a remarkable tenure that lasted through the 8-year administrations of Jefferson, Madison and Monroe, 4 years if John Quincy Adams and 7 of the 8 years of Jackson's presidency. At time of Marshall's accession, the court was very weak. (Only 55 decisions or so had been issued to that point.) The Constitution was "breaking in pieces" according to some, and the status of teh mnational government was shaky. Marshall helped change all that. He brought power and respect to the court and a sense of stability to the federal government. He served with 15 associate justices, seven of them with him from 12-30 years; there was great continuity on the court at this time, as well as great congeniality, for which Marshall was personally responsible.

On John Marshall's death in 1835 john quincy Adams wrote that John Marshall was "my father's greatest gift" to the nation.

MARSHALL'S LEADING DECISIONS

(Links below are excerpts: To see entire decisions go to Cornell Law School Supreme Court decisions and search under “historic decisions only.” You will have to scroll to find the case as the search will produce the original case plus all later cases that referred to it.)

1803 Marbury vs. Madison

1810 Fletcher v. Peck

1819 Dartmouth College v. Woodward

1819 McCulloch v. Maryland

1819 Sturges v. Crowninshield

1821 Cohens v. Virginia 1824 Gibbons vs. Ogden

1831 Cherokee Nation v. Georgia & (1832) Worcester v. Georgia

Additional Resources:

Web Sites on Marshall:

Books:

Requirement: Prepare an essay addressing one or more of the following questions:

A. What did John Marshall bring to the court?

B. John Marshall’s important decisions: In which decision or decisions did John Marshall—

C. The mind of John Marshall

Using words from Marshall’s decisions, characterize the way in which Marshall made arguments:

Copyright © Henry J. Sage 1996-2004
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Updated June 6, 2006