More than 5,000 fans came to hear U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg speak about her bestseller, “My Own Words,” at the
Library of Congress’ 2019 National Book Festival, many waiting in line
for hours beforehand. The previous year, Justice Sonia Sotomayor
attracted a similar record-breaking festival audience, and Justice
Clarence Thomas filled the Library’s Coolidge Auditorium for a talk he
gave there.
It’s not just in person, however, that Supreme Court justices draw
crowds at the Library: Year after year, the Supreme Court papers in the Manuscript Division are among the Library’s most frequently used collections.
Representing more than 35 justices, the papers make up the largest
Supreme Court documents collection in the U.S. They span the 19th
century into the 21st, but the collection is especially rich for the
years after 1935, when the Supreme Court’s iconic Capitol Hill building
opened — the expansive quarters provided ample space for justices to
store records.
Hugo Black, Harry Blackmun, William Brennan, Felix Frankfurter, Robert Jackson, Thurgood Marshall, Earl Warren and Byron White:
These are a handful of the justices whose papers bring a steady stream
of visitors — scholars, journalists, students, researchers — to the
Manuscript Reading Room.
They examine individual cases, they track rulings on social issues,
they search for hints about the justices’ lives and they write — legal
analyses, general-interest blogs, biographies, histories. When a portion
of the papers of Justice John Paul Stevens, who died last July, open to
the public in October 2020, interest is sure to be great.
Within the collections are handwritten letters, memos, journals,
draft opinions and conference notes. Some documents connect to landmark
decisions, such as congratulatory notes Warren received as chief justice
following the court’s unanimous 1954 ruling in Brown v. Board of
Education against racial segregation in public schools. “Dear Chief,”
wrote Justice Harold Burton, “Today I believe has been a great day for
America and the Court.”
Other documents are more obscure, yet surprising: Barack Obama, then
still a student at Harvard Law School, wrote to Brennan in the early
1990s reflecting on Brennan’s judicial opinions.
“The papers are as idiosyncratic as the justices,” said historian
Ryan Reft, who acquires and curates legal papers at the Library. “They
show how justices think about things, how they organize things … what
they care about and what they choose to reveal.”
Since the early 1990s, political scientist Joseph Kobylka of Southern
Methodist University has used the papers to write about judicial
decision-making, intercourt dynamics and litigation on reproductive
rights and the death penalty. He is also writing a book about Blackmun;
some of his correspondence with the justice is included in Blackmun’s
papers.
“I just love doing this stuff,” Kobylka said of his research in the
papers. “At the end of the day, I’m exhausted but exhilarated at the
same time.”
Every other year starting in 2011, Kobylka also has chaperoned a
group of his honors students on a spring-break trip to the Manuscript
Division, where they learn how to research the Supreme Court using
original documents.
Paxton Murphy of Covington, Louisiana, was among the 13 students who
sorted through boxes under Kobylka’s direction in 2019. Murphy was
especially struck by how the justices could read the same law and
precedent and hear the same oral arguments yet come to widely divergent
conclusions.
“That’s the big revelation I had,” he said. “It’s just not very
cut-and-dried. There are so many factors and variables that are
affecting these conclusions.”
Longtime journalist and author Joan Biskupic, now a CNN legal
analyst, first delved into the Library’s Supreme Court papers in 1993 as
part of a team that explored Marshall’s collection to write a series in
the Washington Post about the court.
While sorting through correspondence, Biskupic encountered a June 7,
1990, letter from Brennan to Marshall. Referring to the drafting of a
1990 opinion on the rights of criminal suspects to avoid
self-incrimination, Brennan wrote, “As you will recall, Sandra forced my
hand by threatening to lead the revolution.”
Sandra is Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. The letter, said Biskupic,
“whetted my appetite for more on this woman who ‘forced’ the hand of
master strategist Brennan.”
In 2005, Biskupic published the bestseller “Sandra Day O’Connor: How
the First Woman on the Supreme Court Became Its Most Influential
Justice” using the Library’s Supreme Court papers and other sources.
O’Connor has donated her papers to the Library, but they are not yet
open to the public, so Biskupic instead relied on those of other
justices.
“Just because someone’s papers aren’t open, you can find out about
them from the other justices’ papers — correspondence, conference
memos,” said Reft. “There are other ways of getting at it.”
Using the same approach, Biskupic subsequently wrote books about
Justices Antonin Scalia, Sotomayor and John Roberts. Scalia’s papers are
at Harvard University. Sotomayor and Roberts have yet to decide on
repositories for theirs.
“It’s very fulfilling for us as a staff to see when researchers come
in and they write a book or they publish an article,” said Jeffrey
Flannery, head of the reading room. “We’re not a mausoleum here — we
want the collections to be used.”
via https://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2020/01/researching-the-u-s-supreme-court-at-the-library-of-congress/
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