Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

Civil War Soldier, Supreme Court Justice

Susan-Mary Grant author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:25th Aug '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This hardback is available in another edition too:

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. cover

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., was one of the most influential jurists of his time. From the antebellum era and the Civil War through the First World War and into the New Deal years, Holmes' long life and career as a Supreme Court Justice spanned an eventful period of American history, as the country went from an agrarian republic to an industrialized world power.

In this concise, engaging book, Susan-Mary Grant puts Holmes' life in national context, exploring how he both shaped and reflected his changing country. She examines the impact of the Civil War on his life and his thinking, his role in key cases ranging from the issue of free speech in Schenck v. United States to the infamous ruling in favor of eugenics in Buck v. Bell, showing how behind Holmes’ reputation as a liberal justice lay a more complex approach to law that did not neatly align with political divisions. Including a selection of key primary documents, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. introduces students of U.S., Civil War, and legal history to a game-changing figure and his times.

"In this stylish distillation of the life of a towering American, Susan-Mary Grant wrestles brilliantly with the question of what Oliver Wendell Holmes’s Civil War experience meant for his subsequent career as a jurist. Richly informed and elegant in argument, this is contextualised biography of a very high order."

— Richard Carwardine, author of The Global Lincoln

"This is a superb biography of one of the most influential American jurists of all time. Consistently incisive, it demonstrates not only how Justice Holmes was affected by his jarring experience of battle during the Civil War but also how, subsequently, he sought to negotiate his country’s equally painful transition to modernity."

—Robert Cook, author of Secession Winter: When the Union Fell Apart

"Susan-Mary Grant expertly tracks Holmes from the battlefields of the Civil War to the legal minefields of the Progressive era, deftly navigating his complex positions on slavery, free speech, and other issues. Understanding Holmes, we better understand America's passage into the twentieth century."

—Paul Quigley, author of Shifting Grounds: Nationalism and the American South, 1848-65

ISBN: 9780415656535

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 453g

224 pages