Stephen J. Field

Stephen J. Field
Author: Carl Brent Swisher
Publisher: Ardent Media
Total Pages: 504
Release: 1963
Genre: Judges
ISBN:

Servants of the Law

Servants of the Law
Author: Donald R. Burrill
Publisher: University Press of America
Total Pages: 325
Release: 2010-12-02
Genre: Law
ISBN: 0761848924

Servants of the Law examines the lives of two famous California judges, David S. Terry and Stephen J. Field, who created a lasting influence on the politics and judicial history of California's Supreme Court during the court's formative years of 1855 to 1865. These jurists shared the state's highest bench from 1857 to 1859 and, as events would later show, they confronted one another combatively, on and off, for almost thirty-five years. California's beginnings as a United States territory and later as the nation's thirty-first state were, in large part, fashioned in the wake of the country's malevolent and unforgiving the Civil War. Together, Terry and Field's lives served as an animate metaphor for the cultural and constitutional diversity that many nineteenth-century northern and southern judicial immigrants held toward one another.

Gold Seeking

Gold Seeking
Author: David Goodman
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 344
Release: 1994
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780804724807

"The brave independence of the 'roaring days', the camaraderie of the gold fields, jolly diggers on a spree - these are the images that have come down to us of the gold era of the 1850s in Australia and California. But these images were largely shaped decades later, by writers such as Henry Lawson and Bret Harte - they speak of later nostalgia rather than the experience of the time." "In this study of the contemporary response to the discoveries of gold in Victoria and California, David Goodman argues that people at the time were apprehensive about gold rushing, and the kind of society it seemed to prefigure. In the chaos of the gold rushes, individual self-interest seemed to be all that could motivate people to any exertion. And it was only the economic rationalists of the day - those who believed in political economy and its promise, that out of the confusion of individual self-interest would come some sort of social order - who could wholeheartedly endorse the gold rushes as events." "This is a history of the ways people talked about gold. As the first full-length cultural history of the gold rushes on two continents, it examines the meanings of gold at the time, and the narratives which were told about social disruption. It locates the deeper underlying themes in the response to gold. It also looks at the ways in which the dominant later memories of gold were shaped. And it is about national differences, about the construction of distinctive national cultures out of materials common to the British world. This book should be read not only by Australian and American historians but by anyone with an interest in the cultural history of modernity."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Sale

Sale
Author: Anderson Galleries, Inc
Publisher:
Total Pages: 916
Release: 1921
Genre: Art
ISBN:

Sale

Sale
Author: American Art Association, Anderson Galleries (Firm)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1362
Release: 1921
Genre:
ISBN:

Annual Report

Annual Report
Author: Astor Library, New York
Publisher:
Total Pages: 410
Release: 1888
Genre:
ISBN: