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American Judiciary, Part 7: Marbury v. Madison
The New Nation, Creating America Tom Hand The New Nation, Creating America Tom Hand

American Judiciary, Part 7: Marbury v. Madison

Marbury v Madison is the most consequential legal decision in our nation’s history because it established the concept of judicial review in the United States. This principal grants to the judiciary the responsibility to review laws for their constitutionality and gives it the power to void legislation it finds repugnant to the Constitution. That decision was rendered by John Marshall, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in 1803, but the road to that decision extends further back.

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American Judiciary, Part 5: John Marshall, Soldier of the Revolution

American Judiciary, Part 5: John Marshall, Soldier of the Revolution

In early December 1775, Major Thomas Marshall and his son, Lieutenant John Marshall, and the rest of the Culpepper Minutemen were ordered to join Colonel William Woodford at Great Bridge, a small village nine miles south of Norfolk. Here, in the first fight of the American Revolution in Virginia, the young Lieutenant from the frontier would get his initial taste of battle.

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American Judiciary, Part 2: An Independent Federal Judiciary
The New Nation, Creating America Tom Hand The New Nation, Creating America Tom Hand

American Judiciary, Part 2: An Independent Federal Judiciary

One of the foundational governing principles of the Constitution created at the Philadelphia Convention in the summer of 1787 was a separation of powers between the national legislative, executive, and judicial branches. But while significant operating concepts and responsibilities were set forth for Congress and the Executive in the Constitution, the delegates barely addressed the specific structure of the Judicial branch.

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The Barbary Wars, Part 2: The Philadelphia is Lost

The Barbary Wars, Part 2: The Philadelphia is Lost

Soon after Thomas Jefferson was sworn in as our country’s third president on March 4, 1801, Yusuf Karamanli, the Pasha of Tripoli, decided to renounce the existing treaty his North African province had with the United States. Unhappy with the amount of his annual tribute and feeling under-compensated compared to his fellow tyrant, the Dey of Algiers, Karamanli demanded that the new President give him a one-time gift of $250,000 and an annual tribute of $20,000.

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Americana Corner’s 250th Article Launches Barbary Wars Series

Americana Corner’s 250th Article Launches Barbary Wars Series

The Treaty of Paris of 1783 that ended the American Revolution, brought the United States its long-desired liberty and independence from Great Britain. But with that separation came the loss of protection on the high seas for American merchant ships by the Royal Navy. And the removal of that security blanket had painful and expensive consequences for the young country which were first felt several thousand miles away, in the waters of the Mediterranean Sea.

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