In a meticulously researched and engagingly written narrative,
Brian McGinty rescues the story of Abraham Lincoln and the Supreme
Court from long and undeserved neglect, recounting the compelling
history of the Civil War president's relations with the nation's
highest tribunal and the role it played in resolving the agonizing
issues raised by the conflict.
Lincoln was, more than any other president in the nation's
history, a "lawyerly" president, the veteran of thousands of
courtroom battles, where victories were won, not by raw strength or
superior numbers, but by appeals to reason, citations of precedent,
and invocations of justice. He brought his nearly twenty-five years
of experience as a practicing lawyer to bear on his presidential
duties to nominate Supreme Court justices, preside over a major
reorganization of the federal court system, and respond to Supreme
Court decisions--some of which gravely threatened the Union
cause.
The Civil War was, on one level, a struggle between competing
visions of constitutional law, represented on the one side by
Lincoln's insistence that the United States was a permanent Union
of one people united by a "supreme law," and on the other by
Jefferson Davis's argument that the United States was a compact of
sovereign states whose legal ties could be dissolved at any time
and for any reason, subject only to the judgment of the dissolving
states that the cause for dissolution was sufficient. Alternately
opposed and supported by the justices of the Supreme Court, Lincoln
steered the war-torn nation on a sometimes uncertain, but
ultimately triumphant, path to victory, saving the Union, freeing
the slaves, and preserving the Constitution for future
generations.
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