SPEECH OF JUDGE CHAMBERS, ON THE JUDICIAL TENURE, IN THE MARYLAND CONVENTION, APRIL, 1851

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  • Baltimore: Murphy, 1851
By Chambers, [Ezekiel F.]
Baltimore: Murphy, 1851. Modern plain wrappers, 41pp. Scattered light soil, Good+.

Judge of the Maryland court of appeals, Chambers was a delegate to the State "convention which framed a new constitution. There he made himself unpopular by his unsuccessful fight against the provision that the people elect their judges. As a result, under the new constitution he was not elected to his old position" [DAB].
Chambers' passionate argument was based on his fear that popular majorities would trample minority rights, ignore the path of dispassionate analysis, and elect intemperate, unqualified men to the Bench. Northern "fanaticism" over the Fugitive Slave Act is his Exhibit A.
Sabin 11793n. Cohen 1448.

Details

Title

SPEECH OF JUDGE CHAMBERS, ON THE JUDICIAL TENURE, IN THE MARYLAND CONVENTION, APRIL, 1851

Author

Chambers, [Ezekiel F.]

Condition

Unknown

Publisher

Murphy: Baltimore

Date

1851


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