John Marshall: Definer of a NationA New York Times Notable Book of 1996 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 86
... told a lie , Marshall believed that Jefferson rarely told the truth . His personal dislike for Jefferson ultimately contributed to his own political skepticism . Looking back many years later , Marshall said , " I have never believed ...
... told Hamilton . * Marshall said that " with these impressions concerning Mr. Jef- ferson I was in some degree disposed to view with less apprehension any other character , and to consider the alternative now offered us as a circum ...
... told Justice Story many years later.85 Marshall , not having anticipated his selection , brought with him no judicial agenda except to preserve the United States . A quarter of a century later , John Adams , then near death , and ...
... told the party's cau- cus that it was clear Burr could not win and there was no point in continuing to support him . Delaware , he said , would abstain on the next ballot.87 The Federalists in Vermont and Maryland , the two states that ...
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Contents
Marshalls Virginia Heritage | 21 |
Soldier of the Revolution | 37 |
Student and Suitor | 70 |
Husband Lawyer Legislator | 87 |
The Fight for Ratification | 115 |
At the Richmond Bar | 144 |
Virginia Federalist | 169 |
Mission to Paris The XYZ Affair | 192 |
The Center Holds | 327 |
Treason Defined | 348 |
Yazoo | 375 |
A Band of Brothers | 395 |
National Supremacy | 417 |
Steamboats | 446 |
The Chief Justice and Old Hickory | 482 |
Notes | 525 |