Introduction
1. The Colonial Years
2. Law and the Conditions of Agricultural Household Life,
1750-1800
3. Law and the Founding of the American Republic I: Toward
Independence and Republican Government
4. Law and the Founding of the American Republic II: From the
Articles of Confederation to the Constitution
5. The Supreme Court Emerges
6. Law and Entrepreneurship, 1800-1850
7. Law and the Dissolution of the Union I: The Political Parties,
Congress, and Slavery
8. Law and the Dissolution of the Union II: Slavery, the
Constitution, and the Supreme Court
9. The Civil War: Setting the Stage
10. The Civil War: Legal Issues
G. Edward White is David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professor of Law and University Professor at the University of Virginia. His fifteen books include The American Judicial Tradition and Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. White is also the editor of the John Harvard Library edition of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Common Law.
"G. Edward White's first volume of Law in American History is an
outstanding contribution to legal history. The book surveys the
history of American law through the end of the Civil War in
remarkable detail for a single-volume work." --Journal of American
History
"This is a magisterial account of a series of dramatic legal
developments. Essential." --CHOICE
"Never before has a work on American legal history engaged so
profoundly with the
distinctiveness of America's displacement of Indians and
enslavement of Africans. This
fascinating and original book will change the way the category
'American law' is defined."--Noah Feldman, Harvard Law School
"In this ambitious and sweeping narrative of a formative era in
American legal and constitutional history, White takes us a large
step forward in our thinking about the relationships among law,
politics, and culture."--Alison la Croix, University of Chicago Law
School
"Ted White is one of the few legal historians whose broad and deep
knowledge of
American law from the earliest years to the present might enable
him to synthesize the
American legal experience. This magnificent first volume of a
multivolume history
takes us up to the Civil War, and provides a compelling, coherent,
challenging,
and readable account of the first half of American legal history.
Law in American
History is the welcome culmination of a lifetime of
scholarship."--Stanley n. Katz, Princeton University
"White embeds American law in our culture and thus links legal
doctrine and institutions to the ideas of freedom central to our
nation's development. This is an authoritative work of American
history, told through the framework of law."--Alfred L. Brophy,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
"In this wonderful volume, we see a masterful historian at the top
of his game. White synthesizes and makes accessible a truly immense
amount of material-making coherent evolving developments in (and
interactions between) public and private law, courts and politics,
and government and society."--Larry D. Kramer, Stanford Law
School
"White's first volume is as crisp and elegant a statement of the
central themes in the history
of American law as any I know. The pages move seamlessly from the
law of everyday
life in the household and the workplace to the great constitutional
controversies of the day.
This is a book that proceeds with refreshing candor and good common
sense."--John Witt, Yale Law School
"G. Edward White's first volume of Law in American History is an
outstanding contribution to legal history. ... White's focus on
legal, popular, and elite cultures permeates the entire tale told
in this volume. He extends his inquiry to examine lawyers'
professional culture, slave culture, their masters' culture, and
that of abolitionists, workingmen, and indentured servants. It is
these cultural themes that allow even the most seasoned of
legal
historians reading this book to see events in a new light. That
altered vision whets the appetite for White's planned second volume
to complete the story." --Journal of American History
"G. Edward White is one of America's most eminent legal
historians... [and] we now know more and have a truer understanding
of the history of the law in America than we did before White began
writing legal history forty years ago." --The New Republic
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