The Life of John Marshall, Volume 3: Conflict and construction, 1800-1815

audiobook

The Life of John Marshall, Volume 3: Conflict and construction, 1800-1815

by Albert J. (Albert Jeremiah) Beveridge

EN·~14 hours·25 chapters

Chapters

25 total
1

THE LIFE OF JOHN MARSHALL - Standard Library Edition

0:03
2

BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY The Riverside Press Cambridge

0:20
3

PREFACE

9:02
4

ILLUSTRATIONS

2:53
5

LIST OF ABBREVIATED TITLES MOST FREQUENTLY CITED

2:18
6

THE LIFE OF JOHN MARSHALL

0:01
7

THE LIFE OF JOHN MARSHALL - CHAPTER I - DEMOCRACY: JUDICIARY

1:00:55
8

CHAPTER II - THE ASSAULT ON THE JUDICIARY

1:07:29
9

CHAPTER III - MARBURY VERSUS MADISON

1:13:18
10

CHAPTER IV - IMPEACHMENT

1:24:23

Description

In the early years of the 19th century, Chief Justice John Marshall found his most influential constitutional pronouncements forged in the fire of national turmoil. The volume paints how landmark decisions—such as those that defined judicial review and federal authority—were direct responses to the political battles of the era, from congressional disputes to regional tensions. By situating each opinion within the events that demanded it, the narrative shows how Marshall’s legal reasoning was inseparable from the country’s struggle to define its own government.

Beyond the courtroom, the book follows Marshall’s unexpected role in the dramatic saga of Aaron Burr’s alleged conspiracy. It reveals the chief justice’s personal involvement in the high‑stakes trials that clarified the nation’s treason law and exposed the power of political persuasion. Rather than a dry legal treatise, the biography weaves these episodes into a vivid portrait of a man whose judgments helped shape America’s constitutional identity.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~14 hours (857K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2012-08-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Albert J. (Albert Jeremiah) Beveridge

Albert J. (Albert Jeremiah) Beveridge

1862–1927

A self-made lawyer and spellbinding public speaker, he rose from frontier poverty to become one of Indiana’s best-known U.S. senators. Later, he turned to history and won a Pulitzer Prize for his acclaimed study of Chief Justice John Marshall.

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