Roger Brooke Taney was born on 17 March 1777 in Calvert County, Maryland. As a second son who would not inherit the family tobacco plantation, Taney was provided an education, including attendance at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Dr. Charles Nisbet, Dickinson president and instructor in ethics, metaphysics, logic, and criticism, took Taney under his wing, imparting intellectual rigor to his young charge. After graduating in 1795—he delivered the valedictory address—Taney had a brief sojourn home before moving to Annapolis, where he studied law and befriended Francis Scott Key, his future brother-in-law. In the spring of 1799, Taney gained admission to the bar. One of his first cases involved "as great a scoundrel as ever lived" whom Taney nevertheless defended on the grounds that he had been wrongfully charged with a felony (Taney to William Potts, 2 July 1799).
Struggling to find work in Annapolis, Taney returned to Calvert County, from which he was elected to the Maryland House of Delegates at the age of twenty-two. "The ensuing session of the legislature," a Taney biographer notes, "provided one of the most profitable experiences of Taney's life." After serving a single term, Taney relocated in March 1801 to Frederick, a bustling town in western Maryland that was to be his home for more than twenty years. It was in Frederick that Taney made a name for himself as a lawyer. He also regularly appeared before the Court of Appeals in Annapolis, where he met Anne Arnold Phoebe Charlton Key. They married in 1806, the beginning of a near fifty-year union that produced six daughters. Concurrent with his good fortune in the legal and domestic spheres, Taney became one of the leaders of the Federalists in Maryland, serving as a presidential elector in 1808. Yet the War of 1812 signaled the demise of that party.
With the end of the War of 1812, leading Marylanders turned to state and local concerns. Taney immersed himself in issues such as banking, currency, and internal improvements while serving as a state senator (1816-1821) and state attorney general (1827-1831). The latter post, Taney would recall, represented "my highest ambition," as "it had been most commonly filled by highly gifted and eminent men . . ." As a private attorney, he achieved some notoriety while representing Jacob Gruber, a Pennsylvania Methodist minister who was charged with inciting slaves to insurrection after delivering an anti-slavery sermon in Hagerstown in the summer of 1818. Taney, who had recently freed his own slaves, successfully argued for Gruber on free speech grounds. Taney moved to Baltimore in 1823, and made his first appearance before the U.S. Supreme Court two years later. By this time he had hitched his political wagon to Andrew Jackson, who would remember Taney's support when reorganizing his cabinet in the aftermath of the Eaton affair.
On 21 June 1831 President Jackson appointed Taney Attorney General of the United States. Over the next two years, other cabinet members would call on Taney for opinions on subjects both domestic and international. One case that concerned both spheres involved a South Carolina law that provided for the temporary imprisonment of free blacks employed on foreign vessels calling on ports of the state, with said sailors sold into slavery if the master of the vessel could not pay for their confinement. When the British protested the law as a violation of treaty obligations, Taney opined that it was a valid protection against the potential unrest resulting from free blacks visiting a slave state. Attorney General Taney also weighed in on the Bank War, the titanic struggle between President Jackson and the Bank of the United States. It was Taney's lengthy opinion on the recharter of the bank that informed Jackson's famous veto message of 10 July 1832.
Taney's tenure as Secretary of the Treasury was brief, but turbulent. It began in September 1833, when President Jackson appointed him to replace William John Duane, who had refused to comply with Jackson's directive to remove federal deposits from the Bank of the United States. Secretary Taney oversaw the removal process, including the selection of banks to receive government funds. One of these "pet" banks was Baltimore's Union Bank of Maryland, headed by Thomas Ellicott, a Quaker friend of Taney's. Ellicott's misuse of government funds proved to be a major source of consternation for Taney, who exchanged numerous contentious letters with his erstwhile ally in early 1834. This controversy over the Union Bank provided ammunition for Whig opponents to the removal of deposits. Taney would pay the price on 24 June 1834, when the Senate rejected his nomination as Secretary of the Treasury. He returned to his private practice, which he had all but abandoned after assuming the Treasury post.
Taney's respite from public office ended on 15 March 1836, when the Senate confirmed his nomination as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. In succeeding John Marshall, the stalwart guardian of nationalism and property rights, Taney proved to be more sympathetic to states' rights and economic competition. Thus in Charles River Bridge Company v. Warren Bridge Company (1837), one of the first major cases to appear before his court, Taney held that the Massachusetts legislature's granting of a charter for construction of a bridge across the Charles River—in competition with a nearby bridge chartered decades before—was not a violation of the U.S. Constitution's contract clause. Taney further refined Marshall's "national capitalism" in cases such as Bank of Augusta v. Earle (1839), Swift v. Tyson (1842), and Cooley v. Board of Wardens of the Port of Philadelphia (1852). All the while, he endured a series of crises on the home front. One daughter was an invalid, and another left her husband ("an evil . . . hypocrite," in Taney's estimation) to return home. Tragedy struck in September 1855, when Taney's wife and youngest daughter died from fever on consecutive days.
On 6 March 1857 Chief Justice Taney delivered the majority opinion in Dred Scott v. Sandford, a case that centered on a Missouri slave who had sued for his freedom on the grounds that he and his owner had temporarily resided in Illinois and the Wisconsin Territory. Taney asserted that Scott was still a slave, in part because blacks were not U.S. citizens and thus "had no rights which the white man was bound to respect"—including the right to sue in federal courts. Taney's ruling provoked outrage throughout the North, exacerbating sectional tensions over slavery that culminated in civil war. When that war came, Taney proved to be a stalwart critic of the Lincoln administration's policies, noting in Ex parte Merryman (1861) that the President had no power under the Constitution to suspend the writ of habeas corpus. Yet by this point both his reputation and his health were broken. After Taney's death on 12 October 1864, Charles Sumner—for whom Taney had once written a letter of introduction—presciently stated that "the name of Taney is to be hooted down the page of history."
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- Health and Illness
- Family Relations (Taney Family)
- Supreme Court
y11. 1843 / Wednesday night
I write to you again My dear Anne, because I fear my letter of last night may have made
you uneasy, & that you will fancy I am worse unless you receive a letter tomorrow. But
you know how these colds of mine, usually hang about me for some days, & I cannot
expect to be well again until this one has taken the usual course. Yet I think I am better
tonight than I was last night – my pulse is more quiet & I feel no soreness in the
throat – but yet the hoarseness has not left me – and I have thought it prudent therefore
to remain in bed all day – and have risen from it tonight merely to write you this letter.
But I have not felt too sick at any time to set up & to move about any where. I have
confined myself to bed altogether in obedience to the orders so frequently given me by
Doctr. Buckler.
I am most truly sorry to hear that Frank is so
seriously ill & am glad to learn that you are well enough to be with him.1 – Some of the
girls will of course write to me every day while2 he continues so
much indisposed. – I received a letter from Charles
Howard today as well as Sophias, &
both of them lead me to fear that the attack is a sharp one, although from Mr. Howards letter I am rejoiced to see that it is not considered
dangerous –
Much love to you all my dear Anne
We are likely to have a crippled court this Term. I have told you Mc.Kinley is unable to
attend – and today we have a letter informing us that Judge
Story is sick again, & we fear he will not be strong enough to be
present during the Term. Tell Frank to give himself no uneasiness about his cases, for
the Court have agreed to let them lie over without losing their preference – and tell
Dear Sophia that I am greatly obliged to her for her letter.
Autograph Letter Signed
Maryland Center for History and Culture, Baltimore
John Eager Howard Papers, MS 469; Box 20, Folder 53
Single / Mrs Anne Taney /
Lexington Street / Baltimore
WASHINGTON CITY D.C. / JAN 11
Francis Scott Key ("Frank") died on the same day Taney wrote this letter.
