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To: Georgia Girl 2
He tried to have the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court arrested.

Absolute nonsense. Lincoln and Roger Taney had strong differences over slavery and the war. However, Lincoln would never have been foolish enough to arrest the old man and make a hero out of him.

19 posted on 02/17/2015 10:33:08 AM PST by iowamark (I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy)
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To: iowamark

HA! HA! Check your history its common knowledge Abe put out an arrest warrant on the Chief Justice. The cops just would not do it.


25 posted on 02/17/2015 1:46:14 PM PST by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose o f a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped.)
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To: iowamark

“As Charles Adams wrote in his LRC article, “Lincoln’s Presidential Warrant to Arrest Chief Justice Roger B. Taney,” there were, at the time of his writing, three corroborating sources for the story that Lincoln actually issued an arrest warrant for the chief justice. It was never served for lack of a federal marshal who would perform the duty of dragging the elderly chief justice out of his chambers and throwing him into the dungeon-like military prison at Fort McHenry. (I present even further evidence below).

All of this infuriates the Lincoln Cult, for such behavior is unquestionably an atrocious act of tyranny and despotism. But it is true. It happened. And it was only one of many similar constitutional atrocities committed by the Lincoln administration in the name of “saving the Constitution.”

The first source of the story is a history of the U.S. Marshal’s Service written by Frederick S. Calhoun, chief historian for the Service, entitled The Lawmen: United States Marshals and their Deputies, 1789–1989. Calhoun recounts the words of Lincoln’s former law partner Ward Hill Laman, who also worked in the Lincoln administration.

Upon hearing of Laman’s history of Lincoln’s suspension of habeas corpus and the mass arrest of Northern political opponents, Lincoln cultists immediately sought to discredit Laman by calling him a drunk. (Ulysses S. Grant was also an infamous drunk, but no such discrediting is ever perpetrated on him by the Lincoln “scholars”.)

But Adams comes up with two more very reliable accounts of the same story. One is an 1887 book by George W. Brown, the mayor of Baltimore, entitled Baltimore and the Nineteenth of April, 1861: A Study of War (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1887). In it is the transcript of a conversation Mayor Brown had with Taney in which Taney talks of his knowledge that Lincoln had issued an arrest warrant for him.”

- See more at: http://thomaslegion.net/presidentabrahamlincolnandthechiefjustice.html#sthash.WibTV3sg.dpuf


32 posted on 02/17/2015 1:53:41 PM PST by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose o f a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped.)
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