Lawyer’s Lawyer
The Life of John W. Davis
byWilliam Henry Harbaugh
Check nearby libraries
Buy this book

Lawyer’s Lawyer
The Life of John W. Davis
byWilliam Henry Harbaugh
It's safe to say that 99.9% of the population couldn't tell you who John W. Davis was. As Woodrow Wilson, his old boss, was fond of saying, popularity is an evanescent thing. And those few who can might quarrel with Harbaugh's title. After all, Davis was not only a gifted attorney (Oliver Wendell Holmes remarked that ""there was never anybody more elegant, more clear, more concise or more logical than John W. Davis"" to appear before the Court ""in my time"") but also a politician of some considerable consequence: a U.S. Congressman from West Virginia (1910-12), Ambassador to the Court of St. James after World War I, and -- hold on to your history books -- the Democratic presidential nominee in 1924, the man who took on Silent Cal, albeit reluctantly, after the longest (103 ballots) and perhaps most bitter convention the party has ever experienced. But Harbaugh, who has written the definitive life of this ignored American, is right -- Davis was first and always a lawyer, a brilliant advocate who as Solicitor General under Wilson argued some of the most important cases of that progressive era (winning more than 50 of some 70 -- a record which still stands), a strict constitutionalist who was once everyone's choice for a seat on the Supreme Court (he rejected it as a ""life sentence to monastic seclusion""), a legal talent who ultimately served the interests of J.P. Morgan and the conservative corporate institutions, opposing the New Deal and at the end fighting the lost cause for segregation against the NAACP, ACLU, and Thurgood Marshall -- ""He dripped scorn on Dr. Kenneth Clark and the social sciences"" but he lost. He was gentlemanly, courtly, diplomatic, and kindly. But, to the final breath, he remained a Social Darwinist -- a man who believed in the clap-trap of the survival of the fittest. It was, as Harbaugh points out, Davis' greatest strength and his most treacherous weakness.
Check nearby libraries
Buy this book

Previews available in:English
| Edition | Availability |
|---|---|
| 1 Lawyer’s Lawyer: The Life of John W. Davis 1973, Oxford University Press Hardback in English 0195016998 9780195016994 | aaaa |
| 2 Lawyer's lawyer; the life of John W. Davis 1973, Oxford University Press in English 0195016998 9780195016994 | zzzz |
Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references.
- Published in
- New York
Classifications
- Dewey Decimal Class
- 340/.092/4,B
- Library of Congress
- KF373.D387 H37
The Physical Object
- Format
- Hardback
- Pagination
- xvi, 648 p.
- Number of pages
- 648
Edition Identifiers
- Open Library
- OL5435748M
- Internet Archive
- lawyerslawyerlif00harb
- ISBN 10
- 0195016998
- LCCN
- 73083938
- Goodreads
- 1631305
Work Identifiers
- Work ID
- OL4804450W
Community Reviews (0)
Lists


History
- Created April 1, 2008
- 11 revisions
Wikipedia citation
×CloseCopy and paste this code into your Wikipedia page.Need help?
| July 3, 2019 | Edited bymountainaxe1 | Edited without comment. |
| July 3, 2019 | Edited bymountainaxe1 | Added new cover |
| July 3, 2019 | Edited bymountainaxe1 | Edited without comment. |
| July 3, 2019 | Edited bymountainaxe1 | Added new cover |
| April 1, 2008 | Created byan anonymous user | Imported fromScriblioMARC record |







