Hugo L. Black: Cold Steel Warrior

Awards:   Winner of Named an Outstanding Academic Book of 1997 by CHOICE.
Author:   Howard Ball (Professor of Political Science and Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Professor of Political Science and Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Vermont)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780195078145


Pages:   328
Publication Date:   12 December 1996
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Hugo L. Black: Cold Steel Warrior


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Awards

  • Winner of Named an Outstanding Academic Book of 1997 by CHOICE.

Overview

During his thirty-four year tenure as a Justice of the Supreme Court, Hugo L. Black demonstrated, in the words of one of his colleagues, ""a true passion for the Constitution."" At a moment's notice, in front of visiting students or a clutch of legal dignitaries, the Judge would whip his tattered copy of the Constitution from his coat pocket, flip through it to a particular passage and then, in a high voice, read the passage con vivace. And though Black began his political career in Alabama as the candidate of the Ku Klux Klan--with their help in 1926 he became a U.S. Senator--thirty years later, he would argue forcefully for an end to segregation in the South. In Hugo L. Black: Cold Steel Warrior, distinguished writer Howard Ball draws from Black's extensive files in the Library of Congress and on interviews with his colleagues on the Court, his law clerks, and his family to illuminate the enigmatic career of a man who became one of the twentieth century's most vigilant defenders of freedoms and liberty. Ball's examination of Black's life reveals a consummate politician who kept, in a safe beside his desk, the names, addresses, and backgrounds of all those who gave Black support from the time he ran for the county solicitor's job in Jefferson County, Alabama, through his two terms as a U.S. Senator. A fervent New Deal advocate, Black lent his support to F.D.R.'s court packing plan, and was one of the few who stood with the President until the measure's defeat in 1937. Less than one month later, F.D.R. rewarded Black by nominating him to the Supreme Court. Soon after Black's confirmation by the Senate, the story of his Klan membership spread across the nation, prompting Time magazine to write that ""Hugo won't have to buy a robe, he can dye his white one black."" One of Black's early opinions for the Court, however, changed most of the negative opinion about him. Writing for the majority in Chambers v. Florida, Black and his colleagues overturned charges against four African-American men unjustly accused of murder. In addition to Black's political and judicial career, Ball captures some of the great legal minds at work--Earl Warren, Thurgood Marshall, Felix Frankfurter, William O. Douglas, John M. Harlan II, and William J. Brennan--and their encounters with the tough Justice who was an immovable force when engaged in a constitutional battle. From Brown v. Board of Education and the first tests of the power of the federal courts to implement the Brown decision, to the height of McCarthyism and the national hysteria about Communism, to New York Times v. United States, the famous Pentagon Papers case in 1971 (Black's last opinion for the Court which defended a newspaper's First Amendment rights), Black emerges as a staunch defender of federalism and the primacy of the First Amendment, a strict, literal interpreter of the Constitution, and always proud to be a member of the Supreme Court. Throughout his life, Hugo Black's cockiness, sternness, and stubborn determination won him many critics. On every occasion, as Howard Ball shows, Black proved his critics wrong. He became a major presence in the Senate and one of the great Justices ever to sit on the Supreme Court.

Full Product Details

Author:   Howard Ball (Professor of Political Science and Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Professor of Political Science and Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Vermont)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 23.70cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 16.30cm
Weight:   0.630kg
ISBN:  

9780195078145


ISBN 10:   0195078144
Pages:   328
Publication Date:   12 December 1996
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Reviews

Adds a great deal to what every educated reader should know of Black and his place in U.S. legal history. --Library Journal Anyone interested in the persona and work of the late great Associate Justice, will glean appealing and interpretative data from Professor Ball's objective account. --Henry J. Abraham, University of Virginia


"""Adds a great deal to what every educated reader should know of Black and his place in U.S. legal history.""--Library Journal ""Anyone interested in the persona and work of the late great Associate Justice, will glean appealing and interpretative data from Professor Ball's objective account.""--Henry J. Abraham, University of Virginia"


Author Information

Howard Ball is Professor of Political Science at the University of Vermont. A distinguished writer of judicial biographies and histories of the federal courts, he has written many books, including The U.S. Supreme Court: From the Inside Out and Of Power and Right: Justices Black and Douglas and America's Constitutional Revolution.

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