Levi Woodbury
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Levi Woodbury | |
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In office June 5, 1823 – June 3, 1824 |
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Preceded by | Samuel Bell |
Succeeded by | David L. Morril |
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In office March 4, 1825 – March 3, 1831 |
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Preceded by | John Fabyan Parrott |
Succeeded by | Isaac Hill |
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In office May 23, 1831 – June 30, 1834 |
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Preceded by | John Branch |
Succeeded by | Mahlon Dickerson |
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In office July 1, 1834 – March 3, 1841 |
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Preceded by | Roger B. Taney |
Succeeded by | Thomas Ewing |
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In office March 4, 1841 – November 20, 1845 |
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Preceded by | Henry Hubbard |
Succeeded by | Benning W. Jenness |
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In office September 23, 1845 – September 4, 1851 |
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Preceded by | Joseph Story |
Succeeded by | Benjamin R. Curtis |
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Born | December 22, 1789 Francestown, New Hampshire |
Died | September 4, 1851 (aged 61) Portsmouth, New Hampshire |
Political party | Democratic |
Alma mater | Dartmouth College |
Levi Woodbury (December 22, 1789 – September 4, 1851) was the first justice of the Supreme Court of the United States to have attended law school.
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[edit] Life and career
Woodbury was born in Francestown, New Hampshire. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1809, briefly attended Tapping Reeve Law School in Litchfield, Connecticut, and was admitted to the New Hampshire Bar in 1812.
Woodbury was Justice of New Hampshire state supreme court, 1816-23; Governor of New Hampshire, 1823-24; Speaker of the New Hampshire State House of Representatives, 1825; US Senator from New Hampshire, 1825-31; US Secretary of the Navy under Andrew Jackson, 1831-34; US Secretary of the Treasury under Jackson and Martin Van Buren, 1834-41; served again as Senator from New Hampshire, 1841-45; and Justice of the US Supreme Court, 1845-51. He is one of the few individuals to serve in all three branches of U.S. government and one of two people to have served in all three branches and also served as a U.S. Governor (the other being Salmon P. Chase).
As a U.S. Senator, Woodbury was a dependable Jackson Democrat, and President Jackson appointed him Secretary of the Navy (1831 - 1834) and then Secretary of the Treasury (1834 - 1841). Woodbury successfully worked to end the Second Bank of the United States; like Jackson he favored an "independent" treasury system and "hard money" over paper money. In retrospect, the financial Panic of 1837 and the collapse of speculative land prices were legacies of Woodbury's tenure. After the Panic, Woodbury realised that the US Treasury needed a more secure administration of its own funds than commercial banks supplied, and he backed the act for an "Independent Treasury System" passed by Congress in 1840. It was largely repealed under the new administration the following year, but the foundation was laid for an independent U.S. Treasury, finally established in 1846, under President James K. Polk.
In the 1844 presidential election, Woodbury and the Jackson Democrats supported the Democrats' nomination of Polk. When Polk was elected he promptly named Woodbury an Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Woodbury also served as chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance during a Special Session of the 29th Congress. His ten day chairmanship is the shortest on record.
Woodbury County, Iowa, the City of Woodbury, Minnesota, Woodbury Avenue in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Woodbury School in Salem, New Hampshire, and the ship USS Woodbury were named in honor of him.
Woodbury was the father-in-law of Montgomery Blair and great-great-grandfather of actor Montgomery Clift.
[edit] Works
- Political, Judicial, and Literary Writings (edited by N. Capen, Boston, 1852)
[edit] References
- Levi Woodbury at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- Dictionary of American Biography;
- Capowski, Vincent. The Making of a Jacksonian Democrat: Levi Woodbury, 1789-1851 Ph.D. dissertation, Fordham University, 1966
- Woodbury, Levi. Writings of Levi Woodbury. 3 vols. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1852.
- Biography
- Treasury Dept. biography
- Woodbury as a liberal
[edit] External links
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Supreme Court of the United States | |||||||||
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