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Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney: Slavery,…
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Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney: Slavery, Secession, and the President's War Powers (Simon & Schuster Lincoln Library) (editie 2007)

door James F. Simon (Auteur)

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"The clashes between President Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney over slavery, secession, and the president's constitutional war powers went to the heart of Lincoln's presidency. Legal historian Simon brings to life the passionate struggle during the worst crisis in the nation's history, the Civil War. The issues that underlaid that crisis--race, states' rights, and the president's wartime authority--resonate today in the nation's political debate." -- Publisher description.… (meer)
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Titel:Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney: Slavery, Secession, and the President's War Powers (Simon & Schuster Lincoln Library)
Auteurs:James F. Simon (Auteur)
Info:Simon & Schuster (2007), 336 pages
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Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney: Slavery, Secession, and the President's War Powers door James F. Simon

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5830. Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney Slavery, Secession, and the President's War Powers by James F. Simon (read 2 Feb 2024) This book, published in 2006, is an excellent study of the Dred Scott decision in 1856--probably the worst decision ever made by the U. S. Supreme Court and would, but for Lincoln, have destroyed this country. I relished every page of the book and mostly agreed with the able author--the third book by him I have read. ( )
  Schmerguls | Feb 2, 2024 |
A double biography of Lincoln and Taney, focusing on their national careers and the battle over slave politics from the 1840s until Taney's death. I suspect there won't be much new here for anyone who has read much about this period before, but Simon does offer an interesting perspective on Taney as a jurist that may be of interest to some. Recommended as an introduction to the judicial conflicts of the early Civil War period at the very least. ( )
  JBD1 | Jan 6, 2015 |
revised 8/21/11

Lincoln and Taney had a lot in common. Both abhorred slavery. Taney (pronounced tawney) freed his slaves early on. Both were ungainly, tall men, who wore ill-fitting clothes. The similarity ended there, for they had decidedly differing views on the future of slavery, secession, and presidential war powers. Taney opposed Lincoln for his suspension of many constitutional civil liberties (sounds like Bush, except that Bush had a Supreme Court in his pocket.) The first third or so of the book provides a welcome and succinct background to the confrontation between Lincoln and Taney: the Missouri Compromise, Dred Scott, the Fugitive Slave Act. (see David Herbert Donald's masterful biography of Charles Sumner for detail on the physical assault on Sumner on the Senate floor.)

It's truly ironic that a man like Taney who had so vigorously defended civil rights, freedom of speech and had attacked slavery as immoral (see his defense of the Methodist minister Gruber who was indicted for supposed insurrectionist speech) has become so vilified and associated with the slavery and the fundamental causes of the Civil War. But his thoughts in Dred Scott were anticipated years earlier in an opinion he filed as Attorney General under Andrew Jackson. He argued that from a constitutional standpoint,blacks were not entitled to any of the rights of free white men, even if they had been freed. He was a strong adherent to the constitutional principle of states' rights as it pertained to slavery, arguing that the framers had clearly delineated slavery rights in the Constitution. His decision in the Charles River Bridge case was considered seminal in attacking monopolies and freeing up competition that laid the groundwork for western and economic expansion.

Issues that presaged the Civil War are clearly delineated and (unfortunately) reminiscent of contemporary language, if directed elsewhere.. The verbal assaults related to the states' rights to maintain and regulate slavery were supported by many northern states including Connecticut and New York, who argued that interference by abolitionist societies was both "improper and dangerous," and condemned "abolitionist agitation." Illinois adopted similar resolutions, even suggesting that slavery could not be eliminated in the District of Columbia. The resolutions passed 72-6. Lincoln was one of the six, but his explanation -- held back from publication until several bills he wanted passed moved through the legislature -- was measured at best not disagreeing with the right of states to slavery and validating the view that while slavery was bad policy and wrong, the abolitionists' action exacerbated the situation. (Reminds me so much of the complaints against Vietnam antiwar demonstrations.) Again, Taney's and Lincoln's positions on slavery were identical: slavery was evil but the right to slavery was guaranteed to the states by the Constitution.

Lincoln was a good advocate and made no distinctions in clients for political reasons. He defended a slave who had lived in (free) Illinois for several years and claimed her freedom (Bailey v Cromwell in which he was successful). Yet he also defended Robert Matson in a famous case (Matson v Rutherford) Matson lived in Kentucky, a slave state, but owned farm land in Illinois. He would annually bring slaves into Illinois to work his land, each year bringing a different group of slaves so as not to run a foul of the Illinois "black laws" which were enacted to prevent fugitive slaves from settling in Illinois. They basically endorsed the right of "transit," i.e. that slaves could be transited through the free states without fear that slaves might be judged as free. One of Matson's slaves escaped and he sued for the return of the slave claiming that his property was protected under the transit laws. Lincoln never applied his own morality to his understanding of the law. Neither did Taney.

By the 1850's there was pressure from abolitionists to resolve the slavery issue in the court. After all, the justices were not elected and would presumably fall back on the Constitution and justice. Well, the former, perhaps. In 1851, in Strader v Graham, those paying attention might have wanted to reconsider that strategy. Graham, a Kentucky slave owner, would send three slaves into Ohio to promote their musical skills. Ohio was a free state and Strader argued that made the slaves free under the Northwest Ordinance. Had the justices ruled the slave provisions of the NW Ordinance unconstitutional, the Civil War might have occurred early. The Taney court unanimously opted to ignore the issues related to the NW Ordinance. Instead, they ruled, that since the slaves had returned voluntarily to Kentucky, their status as slaves was enforced by Kentucky law under the U.S. Constitution. The fact that they might have become free in Ohio was irrelevant.

Taney and Lincoln were at opposite ends of the spectrum during the Civil War with Taney vehemently opposed to Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus and other civil liberties. "1. . . . the president [...:] cannot suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, nor authorize a military officer to do it. 2. . . . a military officer has no right to arrest and detain a person not subject to the rules and articles of war [...:] except in aid of the judicial authority, and subject to its control." Lincoln simply ignored the ruling. Deja vue anyone?

This will be a good book for my students to read. Descriptions of important cases are lucid yet brief. I should have remembered more of the details of the Charles River Bridge case when discussing Kelo v New London. Again, another example of the justices having to decide between two competing constitutional values. In Charles, the importance of contracts (supported by the Whigs) and that of the common good (the Jacksonian Democrats.) This is another good example of the illness of a justice affecting the outcome. Had the justice not become ill and been prevented from hearing the case, it would have been decided before Taney became Chief Justice. The other big one I remember is Vinson dying which permitted the appointment of Earl Warren who then set about convincing his colleagues that the country needed a strong unanimous decision in Brown v Board of Ed in 1954. Had Vinson not died, the outcome would have been very different.

( )
  ecw0647 | Sep 30, 2013 |
Interesting book, mainly for its take on Taney. I learned, for instance, that his name is pronounced like "Tawn-ey" (rather than "Tane-y"), and that he was actually anti-slavery for a long time, and that he was a very respected jurist... at least until Dred Scott. The author does the best he can with the limited amount of material regarding the intersection of Lincoln and Taney, but there is an interesting chapter regarding Taney and Habeas Corpus and what Taney tried to do to stop some abuses. The book made me see Taney in a somewhat different light. In some regards, I really felt sorry for him. ( )
  estamm | Oct 12, 2007 |
Roger Tawney, best known for the notorious Dred Scott decision, was the nation's fifth Chief Justice, confirmed in 1836. Although Tawney had freed his own slaves, he was an ardent supporter of state's rights, believing that the Constitution authorized slavery as a choice to be made by individual states. Indeed, Lincoln believed this as well, and meant his Emancipation Proclamation (which only applied to states in the south) to be a wartime measure only, hoping for a constitutional amendment when the war was over.

Tawney was known as a careful and sharp analyst of the law. But he was also a defensive Southerner, becoming more prickly as time went on. Simon, a professor emeritus of law and author of a wonderful book on Justice Marshall and President Jefferson, does his best to be "fair and balanced" in his treatment of Tawney. But he is forced to support the general opinion of Dred Scott by legal scholars, who have "savaged" the decision "for its strained reasoning and meager documentation." Northerners at the time found the partisan decision especially "shocking" since "Tawney, over the two decades that he had served as Chief Justice, converted legions of skeptics into true believers in his fairness, pragmatism, and judgment. But in his Dred Scott opinion, where careful scholarship and political wisdom were desperately needed, he failed miserably."

Simon also addresses the question of whether Lincoln abused constitutional processes with his wartime restrictions of civil liberties such as the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus and restrictions on seditious speech. He concludes that Lincoln's policies were mild for the times (Supreme Court rulings on free speech would not come until much later) and moreover, he deems them much more reasoned and reasonable than either earlier practices by John Adams, or later ones by Wilson, Roosevelt, and George W. Bush.

Simon is always worth reading, and this latest effort is no exception. (JAF) ( )
  nbmars | Apr 9, 2007 |
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"The clashes between President Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney over slavery, secession, and the president's constitutional war powers went to the heart of Lincoln's presidency. Legal historian Simon brings to life the passionate struggle during the worst crisis in the nation's history, the Civil War. The issues that underlaid that crisis--race, states' rights, and the president's wartime authority--resonate today in the nation's political debate." -- Publisher description.

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