Joseph Story
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Joseph Story | |
|
|
In office February 3, 1812 – September 10, 1845 |
|
Nominated by | James Madison |
---|---|
Preceded by | William Cushing |
Succeeded by | Levi Woodbury |
|
|
Born | September 18, 1779 Marblehead, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | September 10, 1845 (aged 65) Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Joseph Story (September 18, 1779 – September 10, 1845) was an American lawyer and jurist who served on the Supreme Court of the United States from 1811 to 1845. He is most remembered today for his opinions in Martin v. Hunter's Lessee and United States v. The Amistad.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Story was born at Marblehead, Massachusetts. His father was Dr. Elisha Story (1743-1805), a member of the Sons of Liberty, who took part in the Boston Tea Party in 1773. Doctor Story moved from Boston to Marblehead during the war. His first wife, Ruth (nee Ruddock) soon died, leaving children, and Story married, second, in November, 1778, Mehitable Pedrick, nineteen, the daughter of a wealthy shipping merchant who would lose most of his fortune during the Revolutionary War. Joseph was the first-born of the many children of this second marrigae.
The boy Joseph Story studied at the Marblehead Academy until the fall of 1794 when his father withdrew him from school because the schoolmaster, William Harris (later president of Columbia University), beat Story for some minor offense. On his second attempt, Story was accepted at Harvard, in January, 1795, with the class of 1798. At Harvard he was an excellent and well-behaved student. After graduating second in his class, he read law in Marblehead under Samuel Sewall, then a congressman and later chief justice of Massachusetts. He later read law under Samuel Putnam in Salem.
He was admitted to the bar at Salem, Massachusetts, in 1801. As the only lawyer in Essex County aligned with the Jeffersonian Democratic-Republicans, he was hired as counsel to the powerful Republican shipping firm of George Crowninshield & Sons. He was a poet as well, and published "The Power of Solitude" in 1804, one of the first long poems by an American. In 1805 he was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives, where he served until 1808, when he defeated a Crowninshield to become Salem's representative in Congress, serving from December 1808 to March 1809, during which he led the successful effort to put an end to Jefferson's Embargo against maritime commerce. He re-entered the private practice of law in Salem and was again elected to the state House of Representatives, which he served as Speaker in 1811.
Story's young wife, Mary F.L. Oliver, died in June 1805, shortly after their marriage and two months after the death of his beloved father. In August, 1808, he married Sarah Waldo Wetmore, the daughter of Judge William Wetmore of Boston. They would have seven children, only two of whom, Mary and William Wetmore Story survived to adulthood. The son became a noted poet and sculptor (his bust of his father is in the entrance to the Harvard Law School Library) who would publish The Life and Letters of Joseph Story (2 vols., Boston and London, 1851).
[edit] Supreme Court justice
In November 1811, at the age of thirty-two, he became the youngest Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Judge Story continues to be the youngest-appointed and longest-serving Supreme Court Justice. Here he found a congenial home for the brilliance of his scholarship and the development and expression of his political philosophy.
Soon after Story's appointment, the Supreme Court began to bring out into plain view the powers which the United States Constitution had given it over state courts and state legislation. Chief Justice John Marshall led this effort, but Story had a very large share in the remarkable decisions and opinions issued from 1812 until 1832. For instance, Story wrote the opinion for a unanimous court in Martin v. Hunter's Lessee following Marshall's recusal. He built up the department of admiralty law in the United States federal courts; he devoted much attention to equity jurisprudence and the department of patent law. In 1819 he attracted much attention by his vigorous charges to grand juries denouncing the slave trade, and in 1820 he gave a public anti-slavery speech in Salem and was prominent in the proceedings of the Massachusetts Convention called to revise the state constitution.
Non-lawyers are most likely to be familiar with Story's opinion in the case of the Amistad, which was the basis for a 1997 movie of the same name by Steven Spielberg. Story was played by an actual retired Supreme Court justice, Harry Blackmun.
In 1829 he moved from Salem to Cambridge and became the first Dane Professor of Law at Harvard University, meeting with remarkable success as a teacher and winning the affection of his students, who had the benefit of learning from a sitting Supreme Court judge. He was a prolific writer, publishing many reviews and magazine articles, delivering orations on public occasions, and publishing books on legal subjects which won high praise on both sides of the Atlantic.
[edit] Works
Among his publications are:
- Commentaries on the Law of Bailments (1832)
- Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (3 vols., 1833), a work of profound learning which is still the standard treatise on the subject
- Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws (1834), by many regarded as his most significant work
- Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence (2 vols., 1835-1836)
- Equity Pleadings (1838)
- Law of Agency (1839)
- Law of Partnership (1841)
- Law of Bills of Exchange (1843)
- Law of Promissory Notes (1845).
He also edited several standard legal works. His Miscellaneous Writings, first published in 1835, appeared in an enlarged edition 1851.
[edit] Death
Story died at home in Cambridge, and is interred at the Mount Auburn Cemetery there. Story County, Iowa was named in his honor, as was Story Hall, a dormitory at Harvard Law School.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
- Story, Joseph. American National Biography, 2000, American Council of Learned Societies.
[edit] External links
- Joseph Story at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- Joseph Story at Find A Grave
- Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States on Google Books: Volume I and Volume II
United States House of Representatives | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Jacob Crowninshield |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts's 2nd congressional district May 23, 1808 – March 3, 1809 |
Succeeded by Benjamin Pickman, Jr. |
Legal offices | ||
Preceded by William Cushing |
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States February 3, 1812 – September 10, 1845 |
Succeeded by Levi Woodbury |