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Samuel Chase Totally Explained
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Everything about Samuel Chase totally explained » This article is about the signer of the Declaration of Independence. For the U.S. Congressman, see Samuel Chase (congressman).
Samuel Chase ( April 17, 1741 – June 19, 1811), was an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court and earlier was a signatory to the United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of Maryland. Early in life, Mr. Chase was a "firebrand" states-righter and revolutionary. For unknown reasons, perhaps just emotional maturation, his political views change during his life and career. In the last decades of his career he became well-known as a staunch Federalist, and was impeached for allegedly letting his partisan leanings affect his court decisions, but he was acquitted.
Youth and early career
Samuel was the only child of the Reverend Thomas Chase (c.1703-1779) and his wife, Matilda Walker (?-by 1744), born near Princess Anne, Maryland.
His father a clergyman who had immigrated to Somerset County where his father took up a new pulpit. Samuel was educated at home. He was eighteen when he left for Annapolis where he studied law under attorney John Hall. and started a law practice in Annapolis.
Family and personal life
In May 1762, Chase married Ann Baldwin, daughter of Thomas Baldwin and his wife Agnes. Samuel and Anne had had three sons and four daughters, with only four surviving to adulthood. [
In 1784, Chase traveled to England to deal with Maryland's Bank of England stock, where he met Hannah Kitty, daughter of Samuel Giles, a Berkshire physician. They were married later that year and had two daughters.][
]Career in Annapolis
In 1762, chase was expelled from the Forensic Club, an Annapolis debating society, for "extremely irregular and indecent" behavior.[ This was only the first of the major controversies to surround his life.]
In 1764, Chase was elected to the Maryland General Assembly where he served for twenty years.[
He co-founded Anne Arundel County's Sons of Liberty chapter with his close friend William Paca as well as leading opposition to the 1765 Stamp Act.][
]Continental Congress
From 1774 to 1776, Chase was a member of the Annapolis Convention. He represented Maryland at the Continental Congress, was re-elected in 1775 and signed the United States Declaration of Independence.[
He remained in the Continental Congress until 1778. The involvement of Chase in an attempt to corner the flour market, using insider information gained through his position in the Congress, resulted in his not being returned to the Continental Congress and damaging his reputation.
]Judicial career
In 1786, Chase moved to Baltimore, which remained his home for the rest of his life. In 1788, he was appointed Chief justice of the District Criminal Court in Baltimore and served until 1796. In 1791, he became Chief Justice of the Maryland General Court, again serving until 1796.[
On January 26, 1796, President George Washington nominated Chase as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Chase served on the Court until his death on June 19, 1811.][
]Impeachment
Chase was served with six articles of impeachment by the House of Representatives in late 1804, several of which involved Chase's handling of the trial of John Fries. Two more articles would later be added. The Democratic-Republican-controlled United States Senate began the impeachment trial of Chase in early 1805, with Vice President Aaron Burr presiding.
All the counts involved Chase's work as a trial judge in lower circuit courts. (In that era, Supreme Court justices had the added duty of serving as individuals on circuit courts, a practice that was ended in the late 19th century.) The heart of the allegations was that political bias had led Chase to treat defendants and their counsel in a blatantly unfair manner. Chase's defense lawyers called the prosecution a political effort by his Democratic-Republican enemies.
The Senate voted to acquit Chase of all charges on March 1, 1805, and he returned to his duties on the court. He is the only U.S. Supreme Court justice to have been impeached.[ ]
The acquittal of Chase -- by lopsided margins on several of the counts -- is believed to have helped ensure that an independent federal judiciary would survive partisan challenge. As Chief Justice William Rehnquist noted in his book "Grand Inquests," some people expressed opinions at the time of Chase's trial that the Senate had absolute latitude in convicting a jurist it found unfit, but the acquittal set an unofficial precedent that judges wouldn't be impeached based on their performance on the bench. All judges impeached since Chase have been accused of outright criminality.
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