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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Journal of Supreme Court HistoryVolume 30 Issue 3, Pages 211 - 225 Published Online: 30 Nov 2005 2009, by the Supreme Court Historical Society Published on behalf of the Supreme Court Historical Society
Abstract | Full Text: PDF (Size: 291K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Courtroom to Classroom: Justice Harlan's Lectures at George Washington University Law School Copyright 2005 by the Supreme Court Historical Society ABSTRACTJohn Marshall Harlan had a singularly successful legal career as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court that spanned thirty-three years, from 1877 to 1911, one of the longest terms in history. For twenty-one of those years on the Court he also distinguished himself as a professor of constitutional law at George Washington University. Along with his colleague on the Bench and on the faculty, Associate Justice David J. Brewer, Harlan carried a full course load, teaching just about every subject: evidence, torts, property law, corporation law, commercial law, international law, and his specialty, constitutional law. |