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35 J. Sup. Ct. Hist. v (2010)

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Introduction
        Melvin   I. Urofsky


    During  the nineteen years he served as
an  Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme
Court, David  H. Souter was  a good friend
to the Supreme Court Historical Society, and
we  shall all miss not only his presence but
his good humor  as well. In this issue we are
pleased to carry tributes to him by another
friend of the Society, former Justice Sandra
Day  O'Connor,  and two of Justice Souter's
former clerks. Heather K. Gerken is currently
the J. Skelly Wright Professor at the Yale Law
School, and Kermit Roosevelt III teaches law
at the University of Pennsylvania.
    This issue carries an even greater diversity
of materials than usual and once again testifies
to how extensive we now consider the field of
Supreme  Court history. Jeffrey L. Amestoy is
the retired chief justice of the Supreme Court
of Vermont and well knows how a judicial case
can affect public policy. His article focuses
on Richard Henry Dana,  best known to most
people for his memoir Two  Years Before the
Mast  (1840). Dana had an eventful life and
was known  in his time as a champion of two
downtrodden  groups, sailors and slaves. He
served as counsel in one of the first instances


in which the U.S. Supreme Court considered
the extent of the executive's war powers-
Lincoln's blockade of Southern ports after the
start of the rebellion. The litigation, known as
the Prize Cases (1863), involved ships seized
during the blockade, and if the Court had cho-
sen to declare the blockade illegal-as Chief
Justice Roger Taney wanted to do-it would
have struck a serious blow to the Union. Ac-
cording to Chief Justice Amestoy, Dana's skill
averted a potential catastrophe.
    One always hears the phrase I'll take it all
the way to the Supreme Court, but we know
that in any given Term, the Court routinely
turns away literally thousands of petitions for
review. The ones that the Court chooses to
hear normally deal with questions of consti-
tutional or statutory interpretation. Yet every
now  and then it chooses to hear something
different. U.S. Circuit Court Judge Myron H.
Bright tells us about one of those cases, and
especially about the dogged determination of
a particular lawyer to do right by his client.
A  Nebraska  farmer was found  dead in his
barn, and while it might have been an acci-
dent, the coroner initially ruled suicide and the


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