Description:

Stone Harlan

Harlan Stone ALS regarding his S.C. Chief Justice appointment: "[I] only hope that I may justify your expression of confidence"


1p ALS on watermarked bifold cream stationery paper with "Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D.C." letterhead, signed by newly appointed Supreme Court Chief Justice Harlan Stone (1872-1946) as "Harlan F. Stone" in lower right corner. In near fine condition. Expected light paper folds. Each page measures 5" x 7.75".

 

Harlan Stone wrote this ALS on August 11, 1941 from his chambers in Washington, DC:

 

"Dear Mr. Shapiro

 

Thank you for your kind letter of congratulations which I find waiting my return from a trip in the West. I greatly appreciate your writing, and only hope that I may justify your expression of confidence.

 

With kind regards I am

 

Yours Sincerely

 

Harlan F. Stone".

 

Harlan Stone was first appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by 30th U.S. President Calvin Coolidge. Stone served on the bench from 1925 to 1941 as an Associate Justice, and from July 1941 to April 1946 as its 12th Chief Justice. Like his colleague Felix Frankfurter, Stone taught at a prestigious law school (in this case Columbia) and privately practiced before his Supreme Court appointments. Stone formed one third of the left-leaning Supreme Court's “Three Musketeers”. Throughout his twenty-year-long Supreme Court career, Stone adjudicated  issues ranging from World War I conscientious objectors to World War II German saboteurs, and from anti-trust laws to personal jurisdiction.

 

Stone's correspondent Harold Roland Shapiro (active 1930-1970) was admitted to the New York bar in 1927. Shapiro served for many years as a New York City Assistant District Attorney dealing mainly with criminal cases. He was also a writer. Shapiro's scholarly interests were diverse: he published monographs on topics ranging from labor law to Lincoln biography. Shapiro also contributed to the New York Times and wrote book reviews.

 

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