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John Appleton was a prominent American lawyer who practiced in and
around Bangor, Maine, beginning in the early 1820s and earned a
national reputation as Chief Justice of Maine's supreme court.
Through a study of Appleton's life and thought, Gold shows how the
commitment to individual liberty and personal responsibility helped
shape nineteenth-century American law. By tracing Appleton's life
and law practice, the book addresses an aspect of early American
culture that has received little attention--the nature of American
individualism as embodied in the law. The book contributes to
American legal historiography in other ways. It is one of just a
handful of serious studies of state judges. It adds to the current
revisionist interpretation of laissez-faire constitutionalism.
Finally, it sheds light on some little studied areas of legal
history, in particular the history of the law of evidence. Recently
some historians have recognized that law in the nineteenth century
incorporated broadly held social values or world-views, and a few
have written on the relationship between law and individualism.
Gold contends these scholars have associated American individualism
with self-reliance in the nineteenth century and nonconformity in
the twentieth. Gold shows there is another side to individualism
with self-reliance in the nineteenth century and nonconformity in
the twentieth. Americans lived in society, therefore, their
relations with one another had to be ordered. While they believed
in freedom of action, they also believed that individuals had to be
responsible for the effects of their actions on others. The book is
ideal reading for all students of American legal history in
particular and American history in general.
The dramatic growth of international capital flow has provided
unprecedented opportunities and risks in emerging markets. This
book is the result of a conference exploring this phenomenon,
sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. The issues
explored include direct versus portfolio investment; exchange rates
and economic growth; and optimal exchange rate policy for
stabilizing inflation in developing countries. It concludes with a
panel discussion on central bank coordination in the midst of
exchange rate instability.
The dramatic growth of international capital flow has provided
unprecedented opportunities and risks in emerging markets. This
book is the result of a conference exploring this phenomenon,
sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. The issues
explored include direct versus portfolio investment; exchange rates
and economic growth; and optimal exchange rate policy for
stabilizing inflation in developing countries. It concludes with a
panel discussion on central bank coordination in the midst of
exchange rate instability.
Cyrus Hamlin's letters are not just another addition to the
enormous corpus of soldiers' testimony on the Civil War. Hamlin,
the son of Lincoln's first vice president, chased Stonewall Jackson
in the Shenandoah Valley and served as an officer in Brigadier
General Daniel Ullmann's brigade of black soldiers. His letters
cover the Civil War from its beginning to the horrific New Orleans
race riot of July 30, 1866, and early Reconstruction politics in
Louisiana. Written by a young officer with rare access to men in
power, these letters are uniquely valuable for the light they shed
on the history of the Ullmann Brigade. Ullmann's black regiments
were among the first to be endorsed by the War Department. The
dearth of attention to the Ullmann Brigade makes Cyrus Hamlin's
letters especially noteworthy. They provide unprecedented insight
into a neglected chapter of the African American experience in the
Civil War. Hamlin possessed no great intellectual gifts, a fact
readily observable in his correspondence, but his letters offer a
fascinating and detailed first-hand account of this turbulent time
in our nation's history. An appendix and bibliographical note
complete this work. Several vintage portraits enliven the text.
Ohio's Rufus P. Ranney embodied many of the most intriguing social
and political tensions of his time. He was an anticorporate
campaigner who became John D. Rockefeller's favorite lawyer. A
student and law partner of abolitionist Benjamin F. Wade, Ranney
acquired an antislavery reputation and recruited troops for the
Union army; but as a Democratic candidate for governor he denied
the power of Congress to restrict slavery in the territories, and
during the Civil War and Reconstruction he condemned Republican
policies. Ranney was a key delegate at Ohio's second constitutional
convention and a two-time justice of the Ohio Supreme Court. He
advocated equality and limited government as understood by radical
Jacksonian Democrats. Scholarly discussions of Jacksonian
jurisprudence have primarily focused on a handful of United States
Supreme Court cases, but Ranney's opinions, taken as a whole,
outline a broader approach to judicial decision making. A founder
of the Ohio State Bar Association, Ranney was immensely influential
but has been understudied until now. He left no private papers,
even destroying his own correspondence. In The Jacksonian
Conservatism of Rufus P. Ranney, David M. Gold works with the
public record to reveal the contours of Ranney's life and work. The
result is a new look at how Jacksonian principles crossed the
divide of the Civil War and became part of the fabric of American
law and at how radical antebellum Democrats transformed themselves
into Gilded Age conservatives.
Historians have paid surprisingly little attention to state-level
political leaders and judges. Edward Kent (1802-77) was both. He
served three terms as a state legislator, two as mayor of Bangor,
two as governor, and two as a judge of the state supreme court. He
represented Maine in the negotiations that resolved the
long-running northeastern border dispute between the United States
and Great Britain and served for four years as the American consul
in Rio de Janeiro. The foremost Whig in Maine state politics and
later a Republican judge, Kent articulated classic Whig political
views and carried them forward into his Whig-Republican
jurisprudence. In examining Kent's career as Maine's quintessential
Whig, An Exemplary Whig reveals his characteristically conservative
Whig outlook, including an aversion toward disorder and a deep
respect for law, for existing institutions, and for the wisdom of
experience. Kent brought his conservative disposition into the
Republican Party. He had no use for radical abolitionism,
preferring moderation and compromise to measures that endangered
social order or the integrity of the Union. Kent saw the "slave
power," not abolitionism, as the disrupter of the Union, and he
urged the "fusion" of all antislavery elements into a new
Republican party. In 1859, Maine's Republican governor appointed
Kent to the state supreme court. During his fourteen-year tenure,
Kent adopted a Whiggish jurisprudence, pragmatic and
commonsensical, and displayed a reverence for the common law and a
distrust of "theoretic speculation." After his retirement, he
chaired a constitutional revision commission, admonishing his
fellow commissioners to bear in mind the "practical wisdom" that
kept dangerous innovation in check. As a politician during the
Jacksonian era, Kent exemplified Whig leadership at the local and
state levels. In his jurisprudence, he carried the Whig persuasion
into the Republican ascendancy and the beginnings of the Gilded
Age.
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