[1559] Lessee of Samuel Smith vs. Robert Trabue's Heirs, 9 Peters, 4-6; U.S. vs. Nourse, ib. 11-32; Caldwell et al. vs. Carrington's Heirs, ib. 87-105; Bradley vs. The Washington, etc. Steam Packet Co. ib. 107-16; Delassus vs. U.S. ib. 118-36; Chouteau's Heirs vs. U.S. ib. 137-46; U.S. vs. Clarke, ib. 168-70; U.S. vs.. Huertas, ib. 171-74; Field et al. vs. U.S. ib. 182-203; Mayor, etc. of New Orleans vs. De Armas and Cucullo, ib.. 224-37; Life and Fire Ins. Co. of New York vs. Adams, ib. 571-605.

[1560] Ib. 711-63.

[1561] 9 Peters, 723.

[1562] Story to Fay, March 2, 1835, Story, ii, 193.

[1563] Story to Peters, May 20, 1835, ib. 194.

[1564] Kent's Journal, May 16, 1835, Kent MSS. Lib. Cong.

[1565] Smith to Kent, June 13, 1835, Kent MSS. Lib. Cong.

[1566] Randolph: Physick, 100-01.

[1567] Story to Peters, June 19, 1835, Story, ii, 199-200.

[1568] Chapman to Brockenbrough, July 6, 1835, quoted in the Richmond Enquirer, July 10, 1835. Marshall died "at the Boarding House of Mrs. Crim, Walnut street below Fourth." (Philadelphia Inquirer, July 7, 1835.) Three of Marshall's sons were with him when he died. His eldest son, Thomas, when hastening to his father's bedside, had been killed in Baltimore by the fall upon his head of bricks from a chimney blown down by a sudden and violent storm. Marshall was not informed of his son's death.