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See also: American jurist, was See also: born in Calvert county, See also: Maryland, on the 17th of See also: March 1777, of
See also: Roman Catholic parentage
.
He graduated from Dickinson See also: College, See also: Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in 1795, began the study of See also: law at See also: Annapolis in 1796, and was admitted to the See also: bar in 1799
.
In 18o6 he married See also: Anne Phebe See also: Key,
See also: sister of See also: Francis See also: Scott Key
.
He entered politics as a Federalist, and was a member of the Maryland See also: House of Delegates in 1799—80
.
His faith in Federalism was weakened by the party's opposition to the War of 1812, and he gradually became associated with the Jacksonian wing of the Republican party
.
He served in the See also: state Senate in 1816—21, was attorney-general of Maryland in 1827—31; and in See also: July 1831 entered President See also: Jackson's See also: cabinet as attorney-general of the See also: United States
.
He was the President's chief adviser in the attack on the United States See also: Bank, and was transferred to the See also: treasury department in See also: September 1833 for the See also: special purpose of removing the See also: government deposits
.
This conduct brought him into conflict with the Senate, which passed a See also: vote of censure, and (in See also: June 1834) refused to confirm his See also: appointment as secretary of the treasury
.
He returned to his law practice in Baltimore, but on the 28th of See also: December 1835 was nominated Chief-See also: Justice of the United States Supreme See also: Court to succeed See also: John
See also: Marshall
.
After strong opposition the nomination was confirmed, on the 15th of March 1836, by the Senate
.
Under the guidance of See also: Judges John Jay, Marshall, and See also: Joseph See also: Story, the judiciary from 1790 to 1835 had followed the Federalist loose construction methods of interpreting the constitution
.
The personnel of the supreme bench was almost entirely changed during President Jackson's administration (182q—37)
.
Five of the seven judges in 1837 were his appointees, and the majority of them were Southerners who had been educated under Democratic influences at aSee also: time when the See also: slavery controversy was forcing the party to return to its See also: original strict construction views
.
In consequence, although the high judicial character of the men appointed and the lawyers' regard for precedent served to keep the court in the path marked out by Marshall and Story, the state See also: sovereignty influence was occasionally manifest, as, for example, in the opinion (written by See also: Taney) in the Dred Scott See also: case (1857, 19 See also: Howard, 393) that Congress had no power to abolish slavery in territory acquired after the formation of the See also: national government
.
During the See also: Civil War, See also: Judge Taney struggled unsuccessfully to protect individual liberty from the encroachments of the military authorities
.
In the case of ex parte John Merryman (1861, See also: Campbell's Reports, 646), he protested against the
See also: assumption of power by the President to suspend the privileges of the writ of habeas corpus or to confer that power upon a military officer without the authorization of Congress
.
The delivering of this opinion, on circuit, in Baltimore, in May 1861, was one of the judge's last public acts
.
He died on the 12th of See also: October 1864
.
An authoritative biography is See also: Samuel Tyler's Memoir of See also: Roger See also: Brooke Taney (Baltimore, 1872)
.
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