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  1. John William Marshall (Manhattan, 6 de julho de 1958) atuou como Secretário de Segurança Pública no gabinete do governadores da Virgínia Mark Warner e Tim Kaine de 2002 até 2010, sendo a pessoa que passou mais tempo atuando no gabinete de um governador da Virgínia.

    • Early Life and Revolutionary War Service
    • Law Practice and Entrance Into Politics
    • From Secretary of State to Chief Justice
    • Marshall’s Impact on The Supreme Court
    • Death and Legacy
    • Sources

    Marshall was born on September 24, 1755 on the Virginia frontier, in what is now Fauquier County. He was the oldest of 15 children born to Thomas Marshall, a land surveyor who worked for the powerful Lord Fairfax and was later elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses, and Mary Keith, a granddaughter of William Randolph, a key figure in the establ...

    After leaving military service in 1780, Marshall studied law at William & Mary with the renowned jurist George Wythe and courted his future wife, Mary Willis (Polly) Ambler, who lived in nearby Yorktown. He was soon admitted to the Virginia bar and began his own law practice, which flourished due to his success defending clients against British cre...

    In 1798, Marshall was elected to the House of Representatives. He served for less than two years before Adams appointed him as secretary of state in 1800. After losing to Jefferson in the tumultuous election of 1800, Adams nominated Marshall as chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. He took office in early 1801, just weeks before Jefferson’s inau...

    At the time, the Supreme Court had little authority relative to the president and Congress; it didn’t even have its own building, meeting instead in a vacant committee room at the Capitol. But over his 34 years as chief justice, Marshall shaped the judicial branchinto an equal force in government alongside the president (executive branch) and Congr...

    Though the Federalist Party had effectively dissolved by 1815, Marshall remained a champion of the idea of a strong national government, and a worthy adversary for Democratic-Republican political rivals from Jefferson to Andrew Jackson. During Marshall’s tenure, the Supreme Court would issue more than 1,000 decisions—more than half of those written...

    Joel Richard Paul. Without Precedent: Chief Justice John Marshall and His Times (Penguin Publishing Group, 2019) Ben Wynne. “John Marshall.” Washington Library - Center for Digital History - Digital Encyclopedia, Mount Vernon. “John Marshall, the Great Chief Justice.” William & Mary Law School.

  2. 3 de mai. de 2024 · John Marshall (born Sept. 24, 1755, near Germantown [now Midland], Va.—died July 6, 1835, Philadelphia, Pa.) was the fourth chief justice of the United States and principal founder of the U.S. system of constitutional law.

  3. William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke (1146 or 1147 – 14 May 1219), also called William the Marshal (Norman French: Williame li Mareschal, French: Guillaume le Maréchal), was an Anglo-Norman soldier and statesman.

  4. John Marshall (September 24, 1755 – July 6, 1835) was an American statesman, lawyer, and Founding Father who served as the fourth chief justice of the United States from 1801 until his death in 1835.

  5. Não há dúvida de que JOHN MARSHALL foi a mais importante expressão do Judiciário americano, o elemento que transformou uma instituição insipiente no Judiciário mais pujante do mundo. Não fosse a presença desse gigante na Suprema Corte dos EUA e talvez a história fosse muito diferente.

  6. Explore the character and constitutional legacy of John Marshallthe nation’s fourth chief justice—from the Virginia frontier all the way to the Supreme Court.