A Guide to the John W. Davis Collection 1888-1953
A Collection in
Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Archives
Collection Number 011
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Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Archives, Washington and Lee University
Lewis F. Powell, Jr. ArchivesWashington and Lee University
School of Law
Lexington, Virginia 24450-0303
USA
Phone: (540) 458-8969
Email: powell@wlu.edu
URL: http://law.wlu.edu/library/powell/
© 2001 By Washington and Lee University
Funding: Web version of the finding aid funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Processed by: Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Archives Staff
Administrative Information
Access
There are no restrictions on access.
Preferred Citation
John
W
.
Davis
Collection, 1888-1953, Ms 011, Lewis F.
Powell Jr. Archives, Washington and Lee University,
Lexington, VA
Acquisition Information
John
W
.
Davis
' daughter Julia
Davis
Adams, donated these
materials in 1986.
Biographical/Historical Information
Born in West Virginia in 1873, John
William
Davis
went to
college and law school at Washington and Lee University taking
his LL.B degree in 1895. Having already read law for a year in
his father's office,
Davis
completed the law degree
requirements in nine months. After practicing for a year in
West Virginia, he accepted a position as the third member of
the expanded law faculty at Washington and Lee. During the
1897 school year, Dean
John
Randolph Tucker died and
Davis
had
to take on the additional load of teaching Tucker's classes.
Though tempted to stay on at Washington and Lee under the
leadership of the new president, William L. Wilson,
Davis
chose the "rough & tumble" of private practice. Two years
later, when Professor Charles Graves left Washington and Lee
to accept a chair at the University of Virginia, he was again
invited to join the permanent faculty.
Davis
again selected
private practice over teaching. He remained loyal to
Washington and Lee and later served more that two decades on
its board of trustees.
Davis
practiced law in Clarksburg from 1897 to 1913. During
this period he was active in West Virginia and national
Democratic politics. He was elected to the West Virginia House
of Delegates in 1899 and, from 1911-1913, he served in the
U.S. Congress. In 1912 he married Ellen G. Bassell. (He had
married Julia McDonald in 1899. She died in childbirth a year
later.) From 1913-1918 he served as U. S. Solicitor general.
In September 1918,
Davis
was one of the delegates to the
Berne, Switzerland conference on the treatment and exchange of
Prisoner. From 1918 until 1921 he was ambassador to Great
Britain. In 1921
Davis
moved from London to New York to become
head of the prominent Wall Street law firm
Davis
, Polk and
Wardwell. Clients included J. P. Morgan and Company, and U. S.
Steel.
In 1922, the same year he served as president of the
American Bar Association, Davis
rejected appointment to the U.
S. Supreme Court. In 1924 he became the Democratic nominee for
president. He waged a conservative, high-minded and losing
campaign against Calvin Coolidge. He left the political arena,
only reemerging briefly in the 1930's as an organizer of the
anti-New Deal Liberty league.
For the rest of his career, he devoted himself to his
private practice. By his death in 1955 he had made 139 oral
arguments before the Supreme Court, at the time a 20th century
record. Davis
was honored in his lifetime by fourteen honorary
doctorates. Felix Frankfurter, Learned Hand, and Hugo Black,
among others, deemed him one of the two or three finest
advocates of the century.
Davis
' lifelong fidelity to the conservative legal
principles espoused by his father and by the Washington and
Lee law faculty at the time he was a student make for a
seemingly inconsistent record of advocacy. He may be best
remembered for successfully defending the steel industry
against government seizure during the Korean War, and for
unsuccessfully arguing South Carolina's case for maintaining
segregated schools in the school desegregation cases now known
jointly as Brown v. Board of Education. But
Davis
' second case
as Solicitor General made a strong argument against Oklahoma's
"grandfather clause" excluding blacks from voting (Guinn v.
United States). He spoke in defense of religious liberty in
the 1928 presidential campaign when candidate Al Smith was
attacked because of his Catholicism. In a 1931 pro bono case,
Davis
defended a Yale divinity professor in a case (United
States v. Macintosh) that became a leading precedent in the
development of the law of conscientious objection. During the
Cold War,
Davis
was contemptuous of McCarthyite tactics. He
was involved both in the Alger Hiss case and in preparing the
appeal of J. Robert Oppenheimer to the Atomic Energy
Commission for security clearance.
Separated Material
Twenty one books belonging to John
W
.
Davis
were
donated with this material. All of these books are
housed in the law library Rare Book Room. They have not
been entered into the library catalog, but a list of the
titles is available at the repository. Additionally, an
English Staffordshire porcelain figurine of a pair of
birds is on indefinite display in the anteroom to the
Law Librarian's office.
Contents List
- Box-folder
1/1
Pantops World , Pantops Academy February 15, 1888Charlottesville, Virginia prep school newspaper
- Washington and Lee University School of Law 1892-1897
- Box-folder
1/2
Assignment and Exam 1894Subject of exam is Corporations and Negotiable Paper
-
Class Notes 1894-1895
- Box-folder 1/3
Carriers 1894Notes handwritten in pencil in notebook. Sample receipts and contracts are also in this folder.
- Box-folder 1/4
Real Property 1894-1895
- Box-folder 1/3
-
Professor's Printed Lecture Notes 1894-1895Printed pamphlets. No bibliographic information present. H. Hamilton Bryson, in his Virginia Law Books , p. 388, 390, attributes these titles to
John
Randolph Tucker.
- Box-folder 1/5
Historical View of Equity Procedure
- Box-folder 1/5
Maxims In Equity
- Box-folder 1/5
Express Trusts
- Box-folder 1/5
Mortgages
- Box-folder 1/6
Assignemnts
- Box-folder 1/6
Fraud
- Box-folder 1/6
Acts Voidable by Third Parties, Through Good Between Privies.
- Box-folder 1/6
Doctrine of Notice
- Box-folder 1/6
Adjustment
- Box-folder 1/6
Notes Of Lectures On Natural Law
- Box-folder 1/7
Notes of Lectures on Corporations
- Box-folder 1/7
Notes on Negotiable Paper
- Box-folder 1/8
Conflict of Laws
- Box-folder 1/8
Specific Performance
- Box-folder 1/8
Notes On Insurance
- Box-folder 1/8
Partnership
- Box-folder 1/9
History of Adoption of the American Consitution
- Box-folder 1/9
Notes On Political Science
- Box-folder 1/10
The Single Tax Upon Land
Appears to be a chapter separated from a larger work. Author is Jas. A. Quarles, Washington and Lee University.
- Box-folder 1/10
Untitled
Pages 1 & 2 are missing.
- Box-folder 1/5
- Box-folder
1/11
Printed Memorabilia 1892, 18972 printed items
- Box-folder
1/2
- Box-folder
1/12
West Virginia Law License 1895
- Oversize
2
Appointment as Commissioner to Conference at Berne, Switzerland. Signed by President Woodrow Wilson. September 23, 1918
- Oversize
2
Appointment as Ambassador to Great Britan. Signed by President Woodrow Wilson. November 21, 1918
- Oversize
2
Order of the British Empire. Signed by Elizabeth R. March 13, 1953
- Family and unidentified subjects
- Box-Folder
1/14
Unidentifed male3.25" x 4.25"
- Box-Folder
1/14
Unidentifed female2.5" x 3.25"
- Box-Folder
1/14
8" x 11"
- Box-Folder
1/14
2 photos, one by "Misses Bickle & Moskey."
- Oversize
1
Unidentified male. n.d.
May be William Taylor Thom. (Mat is signed "Wiley Thom.")
- Box-Folder
1/14
- Government and Royalty
- Oversize
1
Supreme Court of the United States c. 1890
Mat signed by all nine justices.
- Oversize
1
Mat signed by all subjects.
- Box-folder
1/15
Mary R. 1921
Signed and dated by the Queen.
- Box-folder
1/15
George R. 1921
Signed and dated by King George V.
- Oversize
1
- Oversize
3
Unidentified male n.d.
-
Lithograph of Thomas Jefferson 1895Physical Location: Separated. Kept with framed artwork.
- Oversize
3
Lithograph of Daniel Webster n.d.
Artist is T. Johnson.
- Oversize
3
Oil on paper.
- Oversize
3
Prints of Middle Temple Hall and Environs 1897-18984 prints
Sujects include: Middle Temple Hall, Lamb's Building, Temple Church, and Inner Temple Gardens, all in Bristol, England.
- Oversize
3
"Skyscraper" January 1930