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Title: Works. Selections. 2010 John Marshall : writings.
Writings / John Marshall. John Marshall : writings.
John Marshall : writings. John Marshall : writings.
Library of America ; John Marshall : writings.
Library of America ; John Marshall : writings.

Main Entry: Marshall, John, 1755-1835, author.
Hobson, Charles F., editor, writer of added commentary.

Publisher: Library of America,
Publication Date: [2010]
Publication Place: New York :
ISBN: 159853064X
9781598530643

Subject: Constitutional history -- United States -- Sources.
Political science.
Verfassungsrecht.
Politik.
United States -- Politics and government -- 1775-1783 -- Sources.
United States -- Politics and government -- 1783-1865 -- Sources.
United States.
USA.
Records and correspondence.
Marshall, John, 1755-1835.
Marshall, John, 1755-1835 -- Correspondence.
Marshall, John, 1755-1835.
Marshall, John, 1755-1835.

Series: Library of America ; 198
Library of America ; 198.

Contents: Soldier, state legislator, lawyer, and federalist, 1779-1797. "A generous soul" : To Thomas Posey, September 1, 1779 -- Raising men and money : To William Pierce, February 12, 1783 -- Failings of the Virginia Assembly : To Charles Simms, June 22, 1783 -- Patrick Henry's influence : To James Monroe, December 12, 1783 -- "The greatest man on earth" : To James Monroe, January 3, 1784 -- Matrimonial news : To James Monroe, February 24, 1784 -- "A candidate at the next election" : To James Monroe, April 17, 1784 -- Reforming the county courts : To Charles Simms, June 16, 1784 -- British debts and the Confederation : To James Monroe, December 2, 1784 -- Affairs in Kentucky : To George Muter, January 7, 1785 -- Shays' Rebellion : To James Wilkinson, January 5, 1787 -- Kentucky and the Mississippi : To George Muter, February 11, 1787 -- Relations with Spain : To Arthur Lee, March 5, 1787 -- Speech in the Virginia Ratifying Convention on the necessity of adopting the Constitution, June 10, 1788 -- Speech in the Virginia Ratifying Convention on the militia, June 16, 1788 -- Speech in the Virginia Ratifying Convention on the judiciary, June 20, 1788 -- Declining a federal appointment : To George Washington, October 14, 1789 -- "The illiberal use of contracted prejudice" : To Archibald Stuart, ca. December 1789 -- The Virginia judicial system : To Albert Gallatin, January 3, 1790 -- Resolutions in support of the Neutrality Proclamation, August 17, 1793 -- Address in support of the Neutrality Proclamation, August 17, 1793 -- Aristides No. I, September 8, 1793 -- Aristides No. II, November 20, 1793 -- "Folly, envy, malice & damnd rascality" : To Archibald Stuart, March 27, 1794 -- "Kiss our children" : To Mary W. Marshall, February 3, 1796 -- Argument in the U.S. Supreme Court in Ware v. Hylton, February 9, 1796 -- Supporting the Jay Treaty : To Alexander Hamilton, April 25, 1796 -- Presidential election results : To James Iredell, December 15, 1796 -- "The two happiest persons on earth" : To Mary W. Marshall, June 24, 1797 -- Dinner with President Adams : To Mary W. Marshall, July 3, 1797 -- Preparing to sail overseas : To Mary W. Marshall, July 5, 1797 -- "This delay is so cruel" : To Mary W. Marshall, July 10, 1797 -- "Beyond expression impatient" : To Mary W. Marshall, July 11, 1797 -- Philadelphia theater and fashion : To Mary W. Marshall, July 14, 1797 -- Onboard ship : To Mary W. Marshall, July 20, 1797.
Diplomat, Congressman, and Secretary of State, 1797-1801. "Sometimes I am melancholy" : To Mary W. Marshall, August 3, 1797 -- The Hague : To Mary W. Marshall, September 9, 1797 -- News of Holland and France : To George Washington, September 15, 1797 -- The first "XYZ" dispatch : To Timothy Pickering, October 22, 1797 -- Economic conditions in France : To George Washington, October 24, 1797 -- The second "XYZ" dispatch : To Timothy Pickering, November 8, 1797 -- "Amusement & dissipation" in Paris : To Mary W. Marshall, November 27, 1797 -- European developments : To George Washington, March 8, 1798 -- To citizens of Richmond, August 11, 1798 -- Public opinion regarding France : To Timothy Pickering, August 11, 1798 -- "Sweet little Mary" : To Mary W. Marshall, August 18, 1798 -- To a Freeholder, September 20, 1798 -- "Serious & alarming" sentiments : To George Washington, January 8, 1799 -- Debasement by faction : To James M. Marshall, April 3, 1799 -- Speech in Congress on the case of Thomas Nash, March 7, 1800 -- Negotiations with Great Britain : To Rufus King, August 23, 1800 -- Anti-British sentiment : To Rufus King, August 23, 1800 -- American complaints against Britain : To Rufus King, September 20, 1800 -- "The strength of Jacobinism" : To Richard Peters, October 30, 1800 -- Prosecutions under the Sedition Act : To St. George Tucker, November 18, 1800 -- The Constitution and the common law : To St. George Tucker, November 27, 1800 -- The election of 1800 : To Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, December 18, 1800 -- "A choice of evils" : To Edward Carrington, December 28, 1800 -- Jefferson and Burr : To Alexander Hamilton, January 1, 1801.
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, 1801-1819. Hopes for the judiciary bill : To William Paterson, February 2, 1801 -- Anticipating Jefferson's administration : To Rufus King, February 26, 1801 -- "The new order of things begins" : To Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, March 4, 1801 -- A delay in issuing commissions : To James M. Marshall, March 18, 1801 -- The judiciary bill of 1802 : To William Paterson, April 6, 1802 -- Questioning the 1802 judiciary bill : To William Cushing, April 19, 1802 -- The constitutionality of circuit duty : To William Paterson, April 19, 1802 -- Opinions regarding circuit duty : To William Paterson, May 3, 1802 -- The war in the South : To Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, November 21, 1802 -- Travel misadventures : To Mary W. Marshall, January 2, 1803 -- Opinion in Marbury v. Madison, February 24, 1803 -- Editing "The life of George Washington" : To Caleb P. Wayne, January 10, 1804 -- Preface to The life of George Washington, 1804 -- The impeachment of Justice Chase : To Samuel Chase, January 23, 1804 -- Criticisms of "The Life" : To Caleb P. Wayne, July 20, 1804 -- Publishing difficulties : To Caleb P. Wayne, September 3, 1804 -- Revising "The Life" : To Caleb P. Wayne, June 27, 1806 -- Circuit Court opinion in United States v. Burr regarding a motion for a subpoena, June 13, 1807 -- Legal questions in the Burr case : To William Cushing, June 29, 1807 -- Circuit Court opinion in United States v. Burr on the law of treason, August 31, 1807 -- "The most unpleasant case" : To Richard Peters, November 23, 1807 -- The election of 1808 : To Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, October 19, 1808 -- Opinion in Fletcher v. Peck, March 16, 1810 -- The War of 1812 : To Robert Smith, July 27, 1812 -- Report of the Virginia River Commission, December 26, 1812 -- Bankruptcy law and the Constitution : To Bushrod Washington, April 19, 1814 -- "My culpable son" : To an unknown correspondent, April 9, 1815 -- Sharing agricultural knowledge : To Richard Peters, July 21, 1815 -- Setting verdicts aside : To Richard Peters, October 12, 1815 -- Plans for revising "The life" : To Bushrod Washington, September 10, 1816 -- A nephew's education : To Louis Marshall, December 23, 1816 -- Reporting Supreme Court decisions : To Dudley Chase, February 7, 1817 -- Hoping for news from home : To Mary W. Marshall, February 14, 1817 -- An autobiographical sketch : To Joseph Delaplaine, March 22, 1818 -- Opinion in Dartmouth College v. Woodward, February 2, 1819 -- Opinion in McCulloch v. Maryland, March 6, 1819 -- "Our heretical reasoning" : To Bushrod Washington, March 27, 1819 -- A friend to the Union no. I, April 24, 1819 -- A friend to the Union no. II, April 28, 1819 -- The Dartmouth College and bank cases : To Joseph Story, April 28, 1819 -- Reprinting "A friend to the Union" : To Bushrod Washington, May 6, 1819 -- "Prejudice will swallow anything" : To Joseph Story, May 27, 1819 -- Answering "Hampden" : To Bushrod Washington, June 17, 1819 -- A friend of the Constitution no. I, June 30, 1819 -- A friend of the Constitution no. II, July 1, 1819 -- A friend of the Constitution no. III, July 2, 1819 -- A friend of the Constitution no. IV, July 3, 1819 -- A friend of the Constitution no. V, July 5, 1819 -- A friend of the Constitution no. VI, July 6, 1819 -- A friend of the Constitution no. VII, July 9, 1819 -- A friend of the Constitution no. VIII, July 14, 1819 -- A friend of the Constitution no. IX, July 15, 1819 -- Amphyction, Hampden, and Hortensius : To Bushrod Washington, August 3, 1819.
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, 1820-1835. Growing wheat : To John Marshall, Jr., July 10, 1820 -- Upcoming Supreme Court cases : To Bushrod Washington, February 8, 1821 -- "We dine out too frequently" : To Mary W. Marshall, February 26, 1821 -- Opinion in Cohens v. Virginia, March 3, 1821 -- "The champion of dismemberment" : To Joseph Story, June 15, 1821 -- A son's need for shirts : To Edward C. Marshall, June 24, 1821 -- Jefferson's criticism of the Court : To Joseph Story, July 13, 1821 -- "An attack upon the union" : To Joseph Story, September 18, 1821 -- The Supreme Court and treaties : To James M. Marshall, July 9, 1822 -- A winter journey to Washington : To Mary W. Marshall, February 14, 1823 -- Opinion in Johnson v. McIntosh, February 28, 1823 -- Preparing a second edition of "The life" : To Bushrod Washington, May 3, 1823 -- Concern about a rumored appointment : To Joseph Story, July 2, 1823 -- Laws against free black sailors : To Joseph Story, September 26, 1823 -- "Non est qualis erat" : To Joseph Story, December 9, 1823 -- Proposals to alter the Supreme Court : To Henry Clay, December 22, 1823 -- Recalling a courtship : To Mary W. Marshall, February 23, 1824 -- Opinion in Gibbons v. Ogden, March 2, 1824 -- "Heaven bless you my dearest" : To Mary W. Marshall, March 23, 1824 -- Preface to A history of the colonies, 1824 -- The importance of female education : To Thomas W. White, November 29, 1824 -- Remembering a ball : To Mary W. Marshall, February 8, 1825 -- "The right side of seventy" : To Mary W. Marshall, February 12, 1826 -- "Those who follow us" : To Timothy Pickering, March 20, 1826 -- Memorandum by Jared Sparks on a conversation with Marshall, April 1, 1826 -- A libel case : To Joseph Story, May 31, 1826 -- Anticipating a son's engagement : To Samuel Fay, September 15, 1826 -- Apologizing for a misunderstanding : To Samuel Fay, October 15, 1826 -- Reading Jane Austen : To Joseph Story, November 26, 1826 -- Opinion in Ogden v. Saunders, February 19, 1827 -- Seeing Washington at a distance : To Timothy Pickering, March 15, 1827 -- Education and pauperism : To Charles F. Mercer, April 7, 1827 -- Slavery and colonization : To Marquis de Lafayette, May 2, 1827 -- An extended autobiographical sketch : To Joseph Story, July 1827 -- A "flattering biography" : To Joseph Story, December 30, 1827 -- Internal improvements and the Constitution : To Timothy Pickering, March 18, 1828 -- Humanity toward Indians : To Joseph Story, October 29, 1828 -- Electing the Virginia Convention : To John Randolph, December 24, 1828 -- Awaiting Jackson's inauguration : To Mary W. Marshall, February 1, 1829 -- "A most busy and crowded day" : To Mary W. Marshall, March 5, 1829 -- "I love the government" : To Joseph Hopkinson, March 18, 1829 -- Property and suffrage : To James M. Garnett, May 20, 1829 -- Accepting a nomination : To Joseph Story, June 11, 1829 -- Suffrage and representation : To Joseph Story, July 3, 1829 -- A barking dog : To James Rawlings, July 25, 1829 -- The Dane professorship : To Joseph Story, September 30, 1829 -- Speech in the Virginia Constitutional Convention on apportionment, December 4, 1829 -- Speech in the Virginia Constitutional Convention on the judiciary, December 11, 1829 -- The birth of a grandson : To Mary W. Marshall, January 31, 1830 -- "Gay sprightly and gallant" : To Mary W. Marshall, February 14, 1830 -- Party success and family feuds : To Mary W. Marshall, March 7, 1830 -- The dangers of presidential elections : To James Hillhouse, May 26, 1830 -- "Mr. Madison ... is himself again" : To Joseph Story, October 15, 1830 -- Jefferson and the federalists : To Henry Lee, October 25, 1830 -- Dining with the French Minister : To Mary W. Marshall, January 30, 1831 -- Calling on Catharine Sedgwick : To Mary W. Marshall, February 7, 1831 -- Opinion in Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, March 18, 1831 -- "The great teacher experience" : To Joseph Story, May 3, 1831 -- Publishing the Cherokee case : To Richard Peters, May 19, 1831 -- Remembering a child's death : To Joseph Story, June 26, 1831 -- "Our tranquil fire side" : To Mary W. Marshall, October 6, 1831 -- Irresistible pears : To Mary W. Marshall, October 12, 1831 -- Health concerns : To Joseph Story, October 12, 1831 -- Recovering from surgery : To Mary W. Marshall, November 8, 1831 -- "The privations of age" : To Joseph Story, November 10, 1831 -- Colonizing freed slaves : To Ralph R. Gurley, December 14, 1831 -- National and state controversies : To Edward C. Marshall, February 15, 1832 -- Opinion in Worcester v. Georgia, March 3, 1832 -- From The life of George Washington, second edition, volume I, 1832. Preface ; Chapter VIII ; Chapter IX -- Political news and a law library : To Joseph Story, August 2, 1832 -- "Our Constitution cannot last" : To Joseph Story, September 22, 1832 -- Jackson's Nullification Proclamation : To Joseph Story, December 25, 1832 -- Eulogy for Mary Marshall, December 25, 1832 -- Opinion in Barron v. Baltimore, February 16, 1833 -- "The heresies of your commentaries" : To Joseph Story, April 24, 1833 -- The history of the Union : To Humphrey Marshall, May 7, 1833 -- Christianity and civil government : To Jasper Adams, May 9, 1833 -- Masonry : To Edward Everett, July 22, 1833 -- Story's commentaries : To Joseph Story, July 31, 1833 -- Napoleon Bonaparte : To Henry Lee, September 21, 1833 -- Plans for a new house : To James K. Marshall, October 14, 1833 -- The dividing line between parties : To Thomas S. Grimkâe, October 6, 1834 -- Virginia politics : To Joseph Story, December 3, 1834 -- A grandson's education : To John Marshall, Jr., December 7, 1834 -- Remembering a conversation with Washington : To James K. Paulding, April 4, 1835 -- "My old worn out frame" : To Richard Peters, April 30, 1835 -- Plans for the summer : To Thomas P. Devereux, May 30, 1835 -- Epitaph, July 4, 1835.

Related Records: Abridgement of (work): Marshall, John, 1755-1835. The papers of John Marshall Chapel Hill, N.C. : University of North Carolina Press, 1974-2006. 12 volumes. (DLC) 74009575.
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