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University of Connecticut

2021

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Legal History

Connecticut 1818: From Theocracy To Toleration, Mark Weston Janis Jan 2021

Connecticut 1818: From Theocracy To Toleration, Mark Weston Janis

Faculty Articles and Papers

What accounts for the "new" 1818 Connecticut Constitution that repudiated the theocracy of the state and disestablished the Congregationalist Church? The answer is proof positive of Professor Richard Kay's proposition that a constitution, representing the foundation of legal system, is not based on law, but rather on politics, economics, and morality.

Connecticut was one of the last American states to separate church and state, and to provide for religious toleration. The 1818 religiously-tolerant Constitution resulted from three causes. First was the collapse of the political mainstay of the Congregational Church, the Federalist Party, which never recovered public support after sponsoring …


The (Joseph) Stories Of Newmyer And Cover: Hero Or Tragedy?, Jed Handelsman Shugerman Jan 2021

The (Joseph) Stories Of Newmyer And Cover: Hero Or Tragedy?, Jed Handelsman Shugerman

Connecticut Law Review

Kent Newmyer’s classics Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story: Statesman of the Old Republic and John Marshall and the Heroic Age of the Supreme Court are important stories about the architects and heroes of the rule of law in America. In Newmyer’s account, Story played a crucial role preserving the republic and building a legal nation out of rival states, and Newmyer’s Story is fundamentally important for students of American history. But in Robert Cover’s account in Justice Accused on northern judges’ deference to slavery, Story is an anti-hero. Sometimes Story stayed silent. In Prigg v. Pennsylvania, Story overvalued formalistic comity. …


The Emerging Genre Of The Constitution: Kent Newmyer And The Heroic Age, Mary Sarah Bilder Jan 2021

The Emerging Genre Of The Constitution: Kent Newmyer And The Heroic Age, Mary Sarah Bilder

Connecticut Law Review

In written celebration of Kent Newmyer’s intellectual and collegial influence, this Essay argues that the written constitution was an emerging genre in 1787-1789. Discussions of the Constitution and constitutional interpretation often rest on a set of assumptions about the Constitution that arose in the years and decades after the Constitutional Convention. The most significant one involves the belief that a fixed written document was drafted in 1787 intended in our modern sense as A Constitution. This fundamental assumption is historically inaccurate. The following reflections of a constitutionalist first lay out the argument for considering the Constitution as an emerging genre …


Joseph Story’S Republics In A Minor Key: Dark Times And The Astonishing Relevance Of Kent Newmyer, Steven Wilf Jan 2021

Joseph Story’S Republics In A Minor Key: Dark Times And The Astonishing Relevance Of Kent Newmyer, Steven Wilf

Connecticut Law Review

No abstract provided.