Samuel Freeman Miller
MILLER, RUTLEDGE
Posted By: Anne Hermann (email)
Date: 11/17/2008 at 11:53:01
The Story of Iowa, William J. Petersen, Lewis Historical Publishing, Inc., 1952
SAMUEL FREEMAN MILLER – U. S. SUPREME COURT
Samuel Freeman Miller, the first Iowan to be appointed to the United States Supreme Court, was of Pennsylvania ancestry, but was born in Richmond, Kentucky, on April 5, 1816. Raised on a farm, the boy knew the full impact of agricultural drudgery. Later he worked in a drug store and then attended Transylvania University at Lexington, Kentucky, where he received a medical degree. He soon decided that medicine was not for him, began the private study of law, and was admitted to the bar in 1847. For three years he practiced in Kentucky and then his opposition to slavery developed so strongly that he became a leader in an attempt to amend the Constitution of Kentucky to prohibit slavery. When this failed, he freed his own slaves and in 1850 moved to Keokuk, Iowa, where he practiced law for fifteen years before elevation to the Federal bench. He died at Washington in 1890, still a poor man. His twenty-eight years of service on the United States Supreme Court at a time when the crushing of the Rebellion naturally enlarged the Federal authority at the expense of that formerly enjoyed by the States, was of the greatest importance. He wrote 783 opinions of which 169 were dissenting. Of his decisions, 141 related to constitutional law. Chief Justice Chase once said, “I consider the opinions of Judge Miller remarkable for their logical power, force, directness, and, in point of judicial style, superior perhaps to those of any member of the Court.”
Judge Miller was, in his personal attitude, the direct heir of Chief Justice Marshall, in that he held the Constitution of the United States the basis of the American government. Hence he was adamant in supporting it against all attacks by the various states. He was distinguished by a commanding presence when on duty and exhibited a superb industry in discharging his duties. Yet, when in private company, he was a good companion and a radiating center of charm. He died in his seventy-fourth year, full of honors and with an unblemished record. It was said that, had he not been a judge, he was so well known and nationally admitted that he could have been elected President following Grant.
WILEY B. RUTLEDGE
Many years elapsed following the death of Samuel Freeman Miller before another Iowan was named to the United States Supreme Court. Finally, in 1943, Wiley Blount Rutledge, a former Dean of the Law School of the State University of Iowa, was named Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Born in Cloverport, Kentucky, on July 20, 1894, Rutledge received his B.A. from the University of Wisconsin in 1914, and his LL.B. from the University of Colorado in 1922. After teaching law in the University of Colorado and Washington University at St. Louis, Rutledge came to Iowa in 1935 to serve as Dean of the Law School at the State University of Iowa. In 1939 he was named Associate Justice of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for Washington, D. C. Four years later President Roosevelt elevated Wiley B. Rutledge to the highest court in the land, where he served with distinction until his untimely death on September 10, 1949. Rutledge loved Iowa with all his heart, and Iowans loved him with equal fervency. He maintained his residence and club memberships in Iowa City. The summer, 1950, issue of the Iowa Law Review contained a symposium to the memory of Wiley B. Rutledge. The contributors to this significant volume were Hugo L. Black, Fred M. Vinson, Irving Brant, W. Willard Wirtz, Victor Brudney and Richard F. Wolfson, Nathaniel L. Nathanson, Fowler Harper, Albert Abel, and Howard Mann.
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