
An influential justice who refused to bow to politics and devoted his keen mind to the U.S. Supreme Court until the age of 90, Oliver Wendell Holmes (1841-1935) helped formulate some of the most progressive judicial thought in 20th-century American history. G. Edward White first sketches Holmes's early years-his childhood in Boston, undergraduate years at Harvard, and his valiant service in the Civil War, during which he was severely wounded three times. After the war, Holmes went into private law practice, wrote his landmark treatise The Common Law in 1881, had a short tenure on the Harvard Law School faculty, and spent 20 years as a judge on the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts before being named to the U.S. Supreme Court. The author focuses on his remarkable 30-year service as a Supreme Court Justice, beginning in 1902, and details Holmes's most significant cases--Abrams v. United States, Northern Securities Co. v. United States, Lochner v. New York, Schenck v. United States, and others--which limited working hours, set a mandatory minimum wage, protected women's rights, legalized labor unions, and defined freedom of speech.OXFORD PORTRAITS are informative and insightful biographies of people whose lives shaped their times and continue to influence ours. Based on the most recent scholarship, they draw heavily on primary sources, including writings by and about their subjects. Each book is illustrated with a wealth of photographs, documents, and memorabilia, framing the personality and achievements of its subject against the backdrop of history.
This biography investigates how Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. transformed American legal thought through his tenure on the Supreme Court and his commitment to judicial restraint. G. Edward White, a legal historian, utilizes primary source documents and historical scholarship to trace Holmes's evolution from a Civil War veteran to a pivotal figure in 20th-century jurisprudence. The text argues that Holmes's experiences in combat and his intellectual rigor fundamentally reshaped the court's approach to labor, speech, and individual rights.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as an accessible and well-researched entry point for those interested in the history of the American judiciary. Readers frequently note that the prose balances academic rigor with a narrative style suitable for students and general history enthusiasts.
Page Count:
160
Publication Date:
2000-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190283440
ISBN-13:
9780190283445
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