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HISTORY OF THE
SUPREME COURT OF THE
UNITED STATES

CHAPTER I

CONDITIONS PRECEDING ITS ESTABLISHMENT: THE
ACQUISITION OF THE LARGE LANDED ESTATES

Although founded as an original institution, apparently new in itself and dissociated from any prior experiment, the Supreme Court of the United States was, nevertheless, the legatee, from its inception, of an antique body of laws and a mass of customs, traditions, views and conditions growing out of long-standing conflicting interests.

Isolated from what has preceded them as some institutions may appear, because lacking a direct titular ancestor, they are no more so than any of the other manifold evidences of human activity. Their form may sometimes seem novel and tmrelated, but their life principle and all of the display of instinct and conduct springing from it, have the most intimate connection with previous events, often reaching back to remote time. Neither are established institutions accidental, capricious or aimless, Their lineage is clearly traceable; and, imperfect as they may sometimes seem, they represent the definite expression at a particular time of a definite purpose to conserve certain ideas or conditions. This much is axiomatic. But at this point conventional historical inquiry stops without scrutinizing the growth and contests of antagonistic

forces, and what special dominant section of those warring

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