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Federal Judicial History

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Russell R. Wheeler, Cynthia E. Harrison
January 1, 1994

The authors explain the provisions of the 1789 Judiciary Act and the compromises it embodies, review the evolution of the federal judicial system during the nineteenth century, and analyze the conditions and debates that led to the passage of the Evarts Act in 1891, which established the three-ti

Emily Field Van Tassel, Beverly Hudson Wirtz, Peter A. Wonders
January 1, 1993

Provides a historical perspective on the reasons federal judges have left the bench. The study focuses on the fewer than 200 judges who, over the last 200 years, resigned from the bench for stated reasons other than age or health.

Anthony Champagne, Cynthia E. Harrison, Adam Land
January 1, 1992

A directory to some 900 oral history interviews with federal judges and other persons involved in federal litigation or associated with the federal courts.

June 1, 1990

In this issue:

  • Historical Publications Sponsored by Court History Programs and Related Agencies

The Court Historian was an occasional newsletter (discontinued) from the Federal Judicial History Office.

Russell R. Wheeler, Cynthia E. Harrison
January 1, 1989

A historical survey published in connection with the bicentennial year of the First Judiciary Act, signed September 24, 1789.

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