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USDOJ: AG: About the Office
List and bios of US Attorney Generals
added by corneliabush 06 Oct 2009
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Executive Disorder
Executive Disorder follows the career of US Attorney General and Associate Justice James Clark McReynolds, who advocated states rights, a true interpretation of the Constitution, and sound currency based on the gold standard. Under Taft, McReynolds was one of the authors of the Judicial Code. McReynolds, best known for his opposition to New Deal policies, was joined by VanDevanter, Sutherland and Butler, who were sometimes called "the Four Horsemen." Executive Disorder traces the use and abuse of executive power to establish policies and organizations that were later struck down as unconstitutional by the Court, and reveals how the door was opened to create an imbalance of the original powers that govern our nation. The book is available on Amazon.com
added by corneliabush 05 Jul 2010
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Prominent Alumni of Phi Delta Theta,...
James Clark McReynolds was a member of Phi Delta Theta.
added by corneliabush 05 Jul 2010
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Executive Disorder | Facebook
Biography of James Clark McReynolds
added by corneliabush 25 Sep 2010
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Bio excerpt, Office of US Attorney General
03 February 1862 | Elkton, KY
James Clark McReynolds
Forty-Eighth Attorney General 1913-1914
James Clark McReynolds was born in Elkton, Kentucky, on February 3, 1862, James McReynolds received a B.S. from Vanderbilt University in 1882, and graduated from the University of Virginia law department in 1884. He practiced law in Nashville, Tennessee, for many years, and was a professor at Vanderbilt Law School from 1900 to 1903. He was appointed Assistant Attorney General of the United States by Theodore Roosevelt and served from 1903 to 1907. Thereafter he moved to New York to engage in private practice. He was retained by the Government in matters relating to enforcement of antitrust laws, particularly in proceedings against the Tobacco Trust and the combination of the anthracite coal railroads. McReynolds was appointed Attorney General of the United States by President Wilson on March 5, 1913, and remained until August 29, 1914, when named Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. He served on the Supreme Court from 1914 to 1941. He died August 24, 1946 in Washington D.C.
About the Artist: Hubert Vos (1855-1935) Vos was born in Maastricht, Holland, and studied in Rome, Paris, and at the Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels. In 1887 he established a studio in London and opened two art schools. Portraits became his specialty and he won gold medals for his work in Paris, Amsterdam, Munich, Dresden and Brussels. He emigrated to the United States in 1892 and became a naturalized citizen in 1898. The Vos portrait of Attorney General McReynolds was painted in 1914.
07 Jul 2010
07 Jul 2010