Oliver Wendell Holmes
Page 60
equity, courts’ jurisdiction over, 184
Erskine, Ralph, 497n59
Espionage Act of 1917, 368, 377, 384, 385, 390, 393
Ethics (Spinoza), 333
Etruria, S.S., 237
eugenics, 14–15, 428–31
Everett, Willy, 124
evidence, rules of, 434
evolution, 170–72
Experience and Nature (Dewey), 424
Experiences of an Irish R.M. (Somerville and Ross), 377
external standard
in criminal law, 232–33, 383
and liability, 21, 170, 175–76, 180, 229–30
Fair Oaks, Battle of, 92, 129
Falmouth (Va.), 102, 103, 105, 107
“Farley” (plantation house), 112, 113
Faneuil Hall Market, 28
FBI, see Bureau of Investigations
federalism, see common law: federal; Fourteenth Amendment; habeas corpus
Federalist papers, 7
Felton, Cornelius, 58, 74, 75
Field, Justice Walbridge Abner, 199–200, 230–31, 253
Fifteenth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, 82, 96
Fifth Amendment, 302
Fifty-fifth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, 111
Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, 109, 111, 247
financial markets, 199–200, 272–73, 295
First Amendment
applicability to the states, 290, 379, 380
and commercial speech, 440–41
and common law of seditious libel, 368, 379–80, 392, 393
and direct-incitement test, 369
lack of academic attention to, 385
and pacifists, 440–42, 460
and prior restraints, 380, 382, 392, 393, 440
and right to petition government, 380–82
and use of mails, 368–69, 440–41, 460
see also free speech
First Congregational Parish (Cambridge, Mass.), 31–32, 34
First South Carolina Volunteers, 58
Fish, Erland F., 320
“Fiske, Herbert,” 213–14
Fitz, Mrs. Walter Scott, 398
Fitzpatrick, Bishop John B., 133
Flannery, John S., 452, 453
Flaubert, Gustave, 332
Fleming, Bunyan, 427–28, 427
flu pandemic of 1918, 377
Fort Independence (Boston), 71, 73, 74
Fort Stevens (Washington, D.C.), 2, 3, 125, 316, 479–80n70
Fort Sumter (S.C.), 70, 74
Fort Wagner (S.C.), 111, 145
Fortress Monroe (Va.), 91
Fourteenth Amendment
and incorporation of Bill of Rights, 289–91
limited to state actors, 290
and right to fair trial, 350, 459
used to block economic and social legislation, 268, 270, 272, 288–97, 302, 342, 348, 405, 409–12, 445
and voting rights, 433
see also Due Process Clause; Equal Protection Clause; Privileges or Immunities Clause; segregation
Fourth Amendment, 434, 520n33
France, OWH’s visits to, 141, 142, 159, 304
Frank, Leo, 348–51, 352–53
Frankfurter, Felix
background and personality, 326–28
Brandeis’s reports on OWH to, 185, 410–11, 439, 440, 442, 444, 448
cases argued before Court, 327, 329
denounces Palmer Raids, 387
and FDR’s birthday visit to OWH, 449–50
final visit to OWH, 452
and “Four Horsemen,” 412
on Gray’s horror of constitutional law, 287
Harvard pressured to fire, 388–89, 393, 426
influence on OWH’s free speech decisions, 387–90, 393, 441
introduced to OWH, 326, 327–28
investigated as radical, 387
joins Democratic Party, 399
and Laski, 371, 372
life at “House of Truth,” 328–29, 328, 353
and McReynolds, 361–62, 426
on old Court chambers, 264
OWH’s affection for, 327–28, 371
and OWH’s authorized biography, 455, 456–57
OWH’s remarks to: dangers of academic life, 16, 63, 181; harm done by father, 44; duty in war, 123; “running universe on paper,” 131; once thought of medical school, 134; reason he wants unmarried secretaries, 317; Pitney’s intellectual honesty, 337; “two tiny testicles” removed from draft opinion, 338–39; Leo Frank’s innocence, 353; offers to subsidize Wu at Harvard, 398; “bad form” to criticize majority in a dissent, 404; thinks of “all the beautiful women he had known” when fellow justices talk of “liberty of contract,” 411; profile in New Republic “made me blush,” 422; sex in modern novels, 443; reads aloud “The Old Sergeant,” 452; asks to burn letters, 455
and OWH’s secretaries, 204, 317, 318, 441, 442
papers, 466
promotes OWH’s reputation, 15–16, 400, 421, 422, 457–58
and Sacco-Vanzetti case, 425–26, 427
story of OWH and Lincoln, 480n70
Frankfurter, Marion, 327, 452
fraternal orders, 189
Fredericksburg (Va.), 102, 103, 104, 107, 116
Fredericksburg, First Battle of, 103–5, 110
Fredericksburg, Second Battle of, 107–8
free speech
“bad tendency” test, 368
change in OWH’s thinking on, 378–85, 381, 388–94, 440–42
“clear and present danger” test, 384, 385, 391
commercial speech, 440–41
common law rule, 368, 379–80, 392, 393
conservative attacks on, 393
direct-incitement test, 368–70
“fire in theater” analogy, 384, 385
“freedom for the thought we hate,” 441, 461
and law of attempt, 383–84, 393
as marketplace of ideas, 391–92, 460
OWH’s lasting influence on, 370–71, 460–61, 524n25
and pacifists, 440, 441–42, 460
and prior restraints, 380, 382, 440
of public employees, 12, 378
and U.S. mails, 368–69, 440
in World War I, 368–69, 377–78, 380–85, 390–93
French and Indian War, 307
Freud, Sigmund, 7
Freund, Ernst, 384
fuel yards, municipal, 224–25
Fugitive Slave Acts, 66–68
Fuller, Justice Melville W.
administrative abilities, 262–63, 271
appearance, character, and views, 267–68, 269, 297
appointment to Court, 267–68
death, 321
OWH importunes for case assignments, 7, 267
relations with OWH, 217, 259, 271, 321
resists pressure to retire, 420
sentence handed down by in lynching case, 417
futures contracts, 198–200
gambling, 199, 222
Gandhi, Mohandas, 374
Garden Street (Cambridge, Mass.), 54, 55
Garrison, Wendell Phillips, 58
Garrison, William Lloyd, 58
Gény, François, 513n26
Georgia Supreme Court, 336, 349
German-Americans
in Civil War, 69, 76, 78, 89–90, 104
indicated under Espionage Act, 377, 378, 380–82
Germanna Ford (Va.), 114, 115
Germany, 145, 217, 364, 378
Gettysburg, Battle of, 72, 73, 109–11
Gierke, Otto von, 364
Gilmore, Grant, 16
Gladstone, William, 139–40
Glendale, Battle of, 92
Godkin, Edwin, 219
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 357
Gogh, Annie, 453
grain elevators, regulation of, 288–89, 410
grandfather clause, 413
Granston Manor, 235, 283, 325
Grant, Ulysses S.
dislike of New England elite, 132
in O
verland Campaign, 114, 115, 117, 118, 121, 123, 125
OWH meets at Spotsylvania, 2
Gray, Anna (“Nina”) Lyman
abiding friendship with OWH, 18, 208, 211, 442
appearance and background, 208–9, 209
assessment of OWH, 18
letters from OWH to, 18, 211, 219–21
OWH’s observations and confidences to: folly of self-importance, 9; ambition as legal thinker, 10; fears of dilettantism, 55; not disgraceful to succeed, 167–68; verbosity of lawyers, 194; difficulties of teenage girls, 206; called “communist” in newspapers, 224; “when in doubt buy it,” 228; “born pagan,” 231; London will rub rust off, 234; carriage trip to nephew’s wedding, 248–49; democratic spirit of bicycle riding, 249; Fanny urges he visit London, 250; resentment at pursuits of pleasure, 252–53; speed and brevity of his opinions pleases the chief, 265–66; Justice White “a fertile mind and charming man,” 270; “snobs” and “gracious ladies” in Washington, 274; “possibility of having enemies” in Washington, 278–79; moved by grave of Clover Adams, 281; “shudders from time to time” over importance of cases, 282; hates disturbance of garden party at Doneraile, 283; “tragical aspect” of seeing places for last time, 284; longing for house of his own, 286; London the enemy of the banal, 287; unable to take TR’s friendship seriously, 301; talked to everyone from princesses to haberdashers in England, 304; automobile “a vain thing,” 305; really has a home of his own at last, 306; asks if John Gray can get him a secretary, 314; disavows ambition to be chief justice, 323; death of Canon Sheehan, 325–26; wrangles with fellow justices, 337; judges who read social or economic prejudices into Constitution, 342; has to make allowances for Southerners, 344; not “under the influence” of Jews, 359; Brandeis’s dull reading recommendations, 389; young woman helped him on with overcoat, 406; recovery from prostate surgery, 408; “guardians of public taste” edit his opinion, 408; public fame like getting rich, 422; declines Washington invitations, 424; terrors of patent cases, 444; writing comes harder, 448; enjoying idleness more than expected, 449; asks her to burn his letters, 455
Gray, Asa, 38
Gray, Justice Horace B., 177, 179, 253–54, 313
Gray, John Chipman
death, 351–52
friendship with OWH, 18, 162, 177
horrified at teaching constitutional law, 287
introduces Frankfurter to OWH, 326, 327
legal practice, 110, 209
and Minny Temple, 146
OWH tells of low mood after nomination, 257
selects secretaries for brother and OWH, 313, 314
Green, Alice Stopford
and Ethel and Leslie Scott, 320–21
OWH’s comments to: Canon Sheehan’s “lovely soul,” 285–86; constitutional law the “prejudices of nine old pedagogues,” 294; caricatured in papers as toreador in Beef Trust case, 300; Hughes and Harlan disappointed not to be chief justice, 323; death of Canon Sheehan, 326; tedium of fellow justices in conference, 337; few shared interests with White, 343
Grenfell, Ethel (“Ettie”; later Lady
Desborough), 218, 283
Griswold, Erwin, 511n73
Griswold, Harriet Ford, 511n73
Guntner, George, 241
habeas corpus, 66, 350–51, 416–19, 427, 459
Hagerstown (Md.), 97, 157
Haldane, Richard Burdon, Lord, 400
Hale, Edward Everett, 31
Hale, Lucy, 208
Hale, Richard W., 216, 274
Hale, Shelton, 364
Hall, Edwin H., 388
Hallowell, Edward Needles (“Ned”), 111
Hallowell, Norwood Penrose (“Pen”)
appearance and character, 69, 71
at Ball’s Bluff, 84, 85, 86, 90
death, 343
enlists with OWH, 69–70, 72–73, 74–75
and freedmen, 130
and fugitive slave incident, 89
as officer of Colored regiment, 109, 111
orders not to fire on fleeing rebels, 92
OWH convalesces with family, 87, 107
OWH’s regard for, 71, 343
wounded with OWH at Antietam, 96
Hallowell, Richard P., 69–70
Hamlet (Shakespeare), 377
Hand, Learned
background and personality, 366–68, 367
correspondence with OWH on free speech, 369–71, 375, 376, 382, 383, 384, 393
direct-incitement test, 368–70, 385
on OWH: childlessness, 206; “do justice” anecdote, 415; innocence and susceptibility to flattery, 400; writing style, 11
papers, 466
praises OWH in anonymous articles, 366, 421
and Taft, 366, 405
visits OWH in retirement, 449
Hanover Court House (Va.), 116, 121
Harding, Warren, 399, 401, 412
Hardwick, Thomas W., 386
Harlan, John Marshall
background, appearance, and temperament, 268–70, 269
as dissenter, 269, 273, 290, 293
heartbroken not named chief justice, 323
and lynching case, 416
opposition to segregation, 269, 290
OWH’s assessment of, 9, 268, 270, 273
Taft complains “does no work,” 335
Harper’s Weekly, 96
Harrison, George L., 320, 353
Harte, Bret, 24
Harvard College
and anti-Semitism, 394, 394
in Civil War, 73–76
compulsory religious instruction, 61–65
deficiencies of prewar education, 56–58
disciplinary system, 56, 65
effects of Civil War on, 137
founding, 26
OWH as student, 56–65
Unitarian influence, 29, 33, 64–65
Harvard Lampoon, 394, 394
Harvard Law Review
articles celebrating OWH, 15, 433
Chafee’s article on free speech, 385
Laski serves as editor, 375
OWH’s articles in, 230, 245, 376
Harvard Law School
archive of OWH’s papers, 17, 457, 465
attacks on free speech and academic freedom at, 387–89, 393
and case study method, 169–70
controversy over OWH’s departure, 167, 181–82
democratic and ethical spirit, 326
and justices’ law clerks, 313, 314, 320
OWH as lecturer and professor, 137, 163, 167, 179–82
OWH as student, 134–36
OWH’s bequest to, 453
OWH’s portrait at, 16, 320
program of study, 135
Harvard Law School Alumni Association, 388
Harvard Magazine, 57–58
“Harvard Regiment,” see Twentieth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 38
Hay, John, 141, 276, 479–80n70
Hayward, Dr. Nathan, 80, 85, 108, 122, 128
Hazel River (Va.), 113, 116
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 184
Hemingway, Ernest, 7
Henrico County Jail (Va.), 100
Henry, Patrick, 121
Henry II, 169
Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 67
Hill, Arthur D., 247, 278, 426, 428
Hill, James J., 297
Hiss, Alger, 443
burning of OWH’s draft opinions, 456
impressions and anecdotes of OWH, 5, 204, 312–13, 444
as OWH’s secretary, 3, 319, 442–43, 444, 448
violates OWH’s rule against marriage, 317
Hiss, Donald, 46, 316, 448, 449–50
History of Freedom, The (Acton), 376
Hoar, Sen. George Frisbie, 254, 255, 278
Hobbes, Thomas, 76
Hofstadter, Richard, 28
Hofstedt, Matthew, 499n14
Holland, OWH’s visit to, 217
Holmes, Abiel (grandfather of OWH), 31–33, 33
 
; Holmes, Amelia Jackson (Mrs. Turner Sargent; sister of OWH), 39, 48, 143–44, 217, 309
Holmes, Amelia Lee Jackson (mother of OWH)
background and personality, 39, 44, 50–51
book of OWH’s visitors when wounded, 88
encourages and approves OWH’s marriage, 143–44, 157
OWH’s Civil War letters to, 73, 80, 85, 86, 119, 122, 123–24, 129
Holmes, David (great-grandfather of OWH), 307
Holmes, Edward Jackson (“Ned,” brother of OWH), 39, 39, 40, 48, 225, 398
Holmes, Edward Jackson, Jr. (nephew of OWH), 152, 205, 248, 449, 453, 454
Holmes, Fanny Dixwell (wife of OWH)
admirers, 143–44
appearance and dress, 143, 144, 216, 234
background and family, 53–55, 54
Cambridge childhood home, 54, 55
chaffing of OWH, 5, 128, 203–4, 216, 318, 424
courage and strength of character, 203, 217, 278
courtship by OWH, 88, 143–44, 157
devotion to OWH and self-sacrifice, 217, 250, 277, 303–4, 353–54
dislike of OWH’s Jewish friends, 19, 359, 390, 511n70
distance from family, 203
embroidery work, 161
European travels, 157–159, 158, 217
eye for small beauties of life, 205
feelings about OWH’s flirtations, 159, 203, 207, 215–16, 279
health problems, 157, 234, 324, 506n55
and Holmes Sr., 157, 217, 225
influence on OWH’s Court opinions, 277, 390
insists on guard during Sacco-Vanzetti case, 427
last illness and death, 439–40, 442
mordant wit, 203–4, 216, 277, 278, 501n58
organizes and manages household, 202, 286–87, 306, 309, 310–11, 490–91n1
OWH’s bequest to family, 454
and OWH’s secretaries, 203, 317, 318, 423
pets, 310
privacy and reclusiveness, 202–3, 276, 422–23, 424, 439
refusal to be photographed, 216
religious views, 29
and TR, 277, 278, 501n58
and travel arrangements, 248
wanting children, 205–7
in Washington society, 276–79, 299, 307, 309, 310–11, 501n61
and William James, 143, 144, 146, 162, 423
Holmes, John (uncle of OWH), 39–41, 40, 54, 309
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr. PRINCIPAL BIOGRAPHICAL EVENTS:
birth, 48; childhood and family life, 38–39, 49–50; relations with father, 43–47, 87–88, 97–98, 106–7; boyhood summers, 52–53; early education, 53–56; attends Harvard, 56–65; youthful abolitionism, 69–70, 130; volunteers as private in Massachusetts militia, 70, 71–75; graduates Harvard, 74–75; commissioned as officer in Union army, 4, 75–76, 77, 79, 108; wounded at Ball’s Bluff, 2, 79, 84–88, 96; in Peninsula Campaign, 91–93; contracts dysentery and lice, 91–92; wounded at Antietam, 2, 93–99, 98, 128, 451; returns to regiment and again contracts dysentery, 102–3; wounded third time, 107–9, 478n25; turns down post in Colored regiment, 109, 111; appointed to Sixth Corps staff and learns to ride, 111–13; in Overland Campaign, 114–25; gallops through Confederate cavalry patrol, 121–22; hating war, decides to leave Army, 120, 122–26; enters law school, 134–36; 1866 tour of Europe, 138–43; climbs Alps, 141–42; courtship of Fanny Dixwell and marriage, 143–44, 157; befriends William and Henry James, 2–3, 144–50; begins law practice, 154–57; 1874 trip to Europe with Fanny, 157–59, 158; buys summer place at Mattapoisett, 156, 161, 162, 225; Boston residences of, 159–61, 160, 202, 217, 227, 490–91n1; part-time lecturer at Harvard Law School, 137, 163, 179;