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William Jay
Jay, John
The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States
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2005
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© The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information)
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Jay, John (b. New York City, 12 Dec. 1745; d. Bedford, Westchester County, N.Y., 17 May 1829; interred at Jay family churchyard, Rye, N.Y.), chief justice, 1789–1795. The eldest son of Peter and Mary (Van Cortlandt) Jay, John Jay was educated privately until matriculation at King's College (Columbia University), from which he graduated in 1764. He read law with attorney Benjamin Kissam; four years later, he was admitted to the New York bar. His law practice prospered. In 1774, he married Sarah Van Brugh Livingston, the daughter of New York governor William Livingston.
The American Revolution altered Jay's career. A member of New York's Committee of Correspondence, he served in the First and Second Continental Congresses. As colonists edged toward rebellion, Jay opposed war with Britain. He was instrumental in formulating the Olive Branch Petition and seriously considered expatriation; however, after adoption of the
Declaration of Independence, his ambivalence dissipated. In 1776, Jay helped draft New York's constitution; and, while his attendance was erratic, he sat until 1779 as the state's chief justice. After 1778, national affairs occupied ever‐larger portions of Jay's calendar. In late 1778, New Yorkers again sent him to Congress, where he was elected president; less than a year later, he became minister plenipotentiary to Spain and in 1782 one of the commissioners in Paris to negotiate a peace treaty with England.
When Jay returned to New York in July 1784, his future as a diplomat was assured; yet, when offered positions as minister to Britain and then to France, he demurred in favor of law practice. Within weeks, Jay was drafted by Congress to be secretary of foreign affairs, a post he retained until 1789. His early misgivings about the impotence of the confederation solidified. By 1784–1785, he became a vocal advocate of a coercive, departmentalized federal government with vigorous executive and judicial branches and a Congress capable of securing economic stability. He took great satisfaction in the move toward a strong federation. While Jay was prevented by illness from writing more than three
Federalist essays, he gladly accepted President George
Washington's 1789 nomination as chief justice.
When the Court convened in the New York City Stock Exchange, Jay expected that its original and exclusive jurisdictions might be exploited to ensure the supremacy of federal law and to force state compliance with key obligations such as the war debts addressed in the Treaty of Peace. (See
Treaties and Treaty Power.) He was disappointed. Jay's Court lacked legitimacy. Antifederalist antipathy toward the federal judiciary still carried weight; the justices'
circuit riding duties eroded morale.
Still, Jay's contributions were substantial. In a 1792 New York circuit court hearing of
Hayburn's Case, he defended the
separation of powers by refusing to allow federal courts to pass judgment, as an Act of Congress mandated, on the claims of invalid pensioners. He made creative use of
grand jury charges to educate the citizenry on the rudiments of federal governance. On two occasions, Jay wielded federal
judicial power in defense of both the Treaty of Paris and American sovereignty in relations with Europe. His dissent on circuit in
Ware v. Hylton (1796) paved the way for High Court insistence upon adherence to treaty provisions in a 1796 appeal of the same case; and in
Glass v. The Sloop Betsy (1794), the Jay Court ruled against France's use of its American consul as a prize court.
Jay finally concluded that the Court was an ineffective instrument of domestic unification and diplomacy. When Georgia responded to the Court's ruling against the state's claim of
sovereign immunity in
Chisholm v. Georgia (1793) with defiance and the introduction of the
Eleventh Amendment in Congress, Jay abandoned the federal bench. In 1794, while still sitting as chief justice, he sailed to England as envoy extraordinaire to defuse tensions with Britain over unpaid debts, sequestration of Loyalist estates, and New World trading rights. The Jay Treaty established mixed commissions to resolve economic disputes, granted trade concessions to Britain, and shifted responsibility for payment of defaulted loans to Congress. While resistance to the treaty was formidable, the Senate ratified it in 1795.
Elected governor of New York in absentia, Jay resigned as chief justice in 1795. When President John Adams asked him to resume his duties as chief justice in 1800, he refused on the ground that the Court lacked “energy, weight and dignity.” Nor could he abide Jeffersonian America. In 1801, Jay retired to his farm in Westchester County, New York; despite ill health, he devoted the next quarter century to the Episcopal church and antislavery causes.
Bibliography
Richard Morris, and John Jay , the Nation and the Court (1967).
Sandra VanBurkleo , ‘Honour, Justice and Interest’: John Jay's Republican Politics and Statesmanship on the Federal Bench, Journal of the Early Republic 4 (Fall 1984): 239–274.
Sandra F. VanBurkleo
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BABY BIO - William Jay Woolston
Newspaper article from: Portland Press Herald (Maine); 5/20/2004; 295 words
; ...Maine) 05-20-2004 BABY BIO - William Jay Woolston Edition: Final Section...Neighbors-Lakes Column: Baby Bio William Jay Woolston was born on April 3...named after his two grandfathers, William Wills and Jay Woolston, and looks...
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William Jay Smith's "The World below the Window".(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Notes on Contemporary Literature; 1/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; William Jay Smith's The World below the Window The geraniums I left last night on...verse by Robert Frost or Wallace Stevens--characteristically displays William Jay Smith's technical skill and ambitious themes, his lyrical response...
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WILLIAM JAY SMITH TO HOST TWO EVENTS ON OCT. 17, 18
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 10/5/2006; 700+ words
; ...University in St. Louis issued the following news release: William Jay Smith, a Washington University alumnus and former Poetry...in Arts & Sciences. Calendar Summary WHO: Poet William Jay Smith WHAT: Two events WHEN: Reading from his work...
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Blair, William Jay "Bill"
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 3/15/2006; 382 words
; Blair, William Jay "Bill" 82, of Pewaukee. Born to Eternal Life on Sun., March 12...other relatives and friends. He was preceded in death by his son Peter Jay Blair "Jay" in 1996. Bill served in the Marines during WWII, Pacific Theatre...
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William Jay Cummings.(DEATHS)
Newspaper article from: Telegram & Gazette (Worcester, MA); 2/22/2008; 486 words
; WORCESTER William Jay Cummings, age 88, of 631 Salisbury Street, Worcester MA, formerly of Queensbury NY, died Thursday, February 14, 2008 in...
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William Jay has joined Carsten & Ladan, P.A., where he will concentrate his practice on violent felony and sex crime defense.(On the Move)
Magazine article from: Florida Bar News; 5/15/2008; 346 words
; William Jay has joined Carsten & Ladan, P.A., where he will concentrate his practice on violent felony and sex crime defense. He may be reached at the main office at 121 S. Orange Avenue, Suite 1420, Orlando 32801 and wjay@ carstenandladan.com.
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Author William Jay Smith to Read His Work at Amherst College
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 9/19/2008; 410 words
; Amherst University issued the following press release: Author William Jay Smith will read from his work at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 8, in Pruyne Lecture Hall of Amherst College's Fayerweather...
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BARRED SECURITIES INVESTOR WILLIAM JAY ZUBICK ARRESTED FOR APPROXIMATE $14 MILLION THEFT
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 6/12/2007; 606 words
; ...Attorney issued the following press release: Monterey County District Attorney Dean D. Flippo announced today that William Jay Zubick, a 42-year-old resident of Carmel and a Canadian citizen, was arrested by District Attorney Investigators...
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NRLC Board Honors Geline William, Jay Duenwald, and Grassroots Volunteers.(National Right to Life Committee)
Magazine article from: National Right to Life News; 7/1/2006; 700+ words
; ...Board of Directors. Resolution to Recognize Jay Duenwald for His Service as Vice-Chairman of the NRLC Board of Directors WHEREAS, Jay Duenwald has served as vice-chair of the...of Directors for 15 years, and WHEREAS, Jay Duenwald, along with his wife Agnes, has...
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OBIT - BURRIS, JAMES WILLIAM JR., (JAY)
Newspaper article from: Roanoke Times & World News; 1/2/2005; 222 words
; James William (Jay) Burris, Jr., 76, of Galax, died Friday, December 31, 2004. Graveside service Monday, 2 p.m. at Summerfield Cemetery. Arrangements by Vaughn-Guynn Funeral Home.
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William Jay
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
William Jay American reformer William Jay (1789-1858) was an abolitionist whose prestige and understanding of constitutional law gave vital support to the cause. William Jay was born in New York City on June 11, 1789. His father was...
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Smith, William Jay 1918-
Book article from: Something About the Author
SMITH, William Jay 1918- Personal Born April 22, 1918, in Winnfield, LA; son of Jay (a soldier) and Georgia Ella (Campster...first marriage) David Emerson, Gregory Jay. Education: Washington University (St...
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William Jay Gaynor
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
William Jay Gaynor 1849-1913, U.S. political leader, mayor of New York City, b. Oneida co., N.Y. He rose to prominence as a civic...
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Smith, William Jay
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Literature
Smith, William Jay (1918– ),Louisiana‐born poet whose education came from Washington University, St. Louis, a Rhodes...
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Jay, William
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
Jay, William ( c. 1793–1837). English architect. His Albion Chapel...16—demolished) was admired by none other than James Elmes . Jay, however, emigrated to Savannah, GA, USA, in 1817, where he designed...
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