William Orville Douglas

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William Orville Douglas

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

William Orville Douglas 1898-1980, American jurist, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1939-75), b. Maine, Minn. He received his law degree from Columbia in 1925 and later was professor of law at Yale. A Democrat, Douglas was appointed (1934) to the Securities and Exchange Commission; as chairman (1937-39) he pursued a vigorous policy of reform. He was prominent as a proponent of the New Deal and was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He became known on the court for his fervent support of civil rights, conservation, and civil liberties, particularly the First Amendment guarantees of freedom of speech and press. Consistently liberal, in 1953 he granted a stay of execution to Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who had been convicted of spying for the Soviet Union and were subsequently executed (see Rosenberg case ). The House of Representatives made an unsuccessful attempt to impeach Douglas for this act.

Among Douglas's published works are case books on business law and volumes on American law and civil rights, including We The Judges (1956) and A Living Bill of Rights (1961). An advocate of outdoor life and an enthusiastic traveler, Douglas wrote many books on these subjects, including Men and Mountains (1950), Russian Journey (1956), My Wilderness (1962), and The Three Hundred Year War: A Chronicle of Ecological Disaster (1972). He also wrote the autobiographies Go East Young Man (1974) and The Court Years (1980). Douglas was sometimes critized for various ethical lapses in his personal life, and the heroic image that emerges in his autobiographical works has been somewhat tarnished by discoveries that he had bent the truth on a number of details, e.g., his youthful health and social status, his military service, and his academic record. Nonetheless, his reputation as an outstanding jurist, staunch protector of privacy and civil rights, and defender of the environment remains intact. An anthology (1959) of Douglas's Supreme Court opinions was compiled by V. Countryman.

Bibliography: See biographies by J. F. Simon (1980) and B. A. Murphy (2003); H. Bosmajian, Justice Douglas and Freedom of Speech (1980).

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Douglas, William Orville

A Dictionary of Contemporary World History | 2004 | | © A Dictionary of Contemporary World History 2004, originally published by Oxford University Press 2004. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Douglas, William Orville (b. 16 Oct. 1898, d. 19 Jan. 1980). US Supreme Court Justice 1939–75 The second youngest Supreme Court appointee, and longest-serving justice, in US history, and one of the most colorful and controversial. He was born poor in Maine, Minnesota, where he was afflicted with polio. Raised in Washington State, he became a distinguished scholar and lawyer, initially graduating from Whitman College in 1920 before obtaining an LLB from Columbia University in 1925. He served as chairperson of the Securities and Exchange Commission, and was appointed to the Supreme Court in 1939 by Franklin Roosevelt. On the Court, the four-times married Douglas was concerned with personal freedom, civil liberties, and the regulation of business during wartime. In Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), he famously emphasized a constitutional principle to privacy. He faced calls for his impeachment when he temporarily stayed the Rosenberg executions in 1953. House Minority Leader Ford again called for his impeachment in 1970 because of what he considered the absence of ‘good behavior’ in Douglas's alleged ‘involvement with pornographic publications and espousal of high-style hippie-yippie style revolution’. In the end he was forced to resign after being partially paralysed by a stroke. He cultivated a persona as an activist defender of the weak, and lived to see his name given to a national park in his beloved Washington State.

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