ILLUSTRATIONS

JOHN MARSHALL[Colored Frontispiece]
From the portrait painted in 1832 by Henry Inman, in the possessionof The Law Association of Philadelphia. A copy was presented to theConnecticut State Library by Senator Frank B. Brandegee and waschosen by the Secretary of the Treasury out of all existing portraits tobe engraved on steel for use as a vignette on certain government bondsand treasury notes.
TIMOTHY PICKERING[50]
From a painting by Stuart, owned by Mr. Robert M. Pratt, Boston.
JOSEPH STORY[96]
From a crayon drawing by his son, William Wetmore Story, in the possessionof the family.
WILLIAM PINKNEY[132]
From the original painting by Charles Wilson Peale, in the possessionof Pinkney's grandson, William Pinkney Whyte, Esq., Baltimore,Maryland.
JOHN MARSHALL[210]
From the bust in the Court Room of the United States Supreme Court.
JOSEPH HOPKINSON[254]
From a portrait owned by Dartmouth College.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICES SITTING WITH MARSHALL INTHE CASE OF M'CULLOCH VERSUS MARYLAND:BUSHROD WASHINGTON, WILLIAM JOHNSON,BROCKHOLST LIVINGSTON, THOMAS TODD,JOSEPH STORY, GABRIEL DUVAL[282]
From etchings by Max and Albert Rosenthal in Hampton L. Carson'shistory of The Supreme Court of the United States, reproducedthrough the courtesy of the Lawyers' Coöperative Publishing Company,Rochester, New York. The etchings were made from originalsas follows: Washington, from a painting by Chester Harding in thepossession of the family; Johnson, from a painting by Jarvis in the possessionof the New York Historical Society; Livingston, from a paintingin the possession of the family; Todd, from a painting in the possessionof the family; Story, from a drawing by William Wetmore Story inthe possession of the family; Duval, from a painting in the Capitol atWashington. Mr. Justice Todd is included as a member of the Courtat that time, although absent because of illness.
SPENCER ROANE[314]
From a painting in the Court of Appeals at Richmond, Virginia.
JOHN TAYLOR OF CAROLINE[336]
From a painting in the possession of the Virginia State Library,Richmond.
JOHN MARSHALL[412]
From a portrait painted by J. B. Martin and presented to the Universityof Virginia in 1901 by John L. Williams, Esq., of Richmond, Virginia.
SILHOUETTE OF JOHN MARSHALL[462]
From the original found in the desk of Mr. Justice Story.
LEEDS MANOR[528]
From a photograph. This was the principal house in the Fairfax Purchaseand was the home of Marshall's son James Keith Marshall. Thewing on the left was built especially for the use of Chief Justice Marshall,who expected to spend his declining years there. Many of hisbooks and papers were kept in this house.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICES AT THE LAST SESSION OF THESUPREME COURT OVER WHICH JOHN MARSHALLPRESIDED: JOSEPH STORY, SMITH THOMPSON,JOHN McLEAN, HENRY BALDWIN, JAMES M.WAYNE[584]
From etchings by Max and Albert Rosenthal in Hampton L. Carson'shistory of The Supreme Court of the United States, reproduced by thecourtesy of the Lawyers' Coöperative Publishing Company, Rochester,New York. The etchings were made from originals as follows:Story, from a drawing by William Wetmore Story in the possession ofthe family; Smith Thompson from a painting by Dumont in the possessionof Smith Thompson, Esq., Hudson, New York; McLean, froma painting by Ives, in the possession of Mr. Justice Brown; Baldwin,from a painting by Lambdin in the possession of the family; Wayne,from a photograph by Brady in the possession of Mr. Justice Field.
THE GRAVE OF JOHN MARSHALL[592]
From a photograph of the graves of Marshall and his Wife in theShockoe Hill Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia.