Roger Brooke Taney was born March 17, 1777 on the Taney Plantation along
the Patuxent River, in Maryland's Calvert County. The Taney family
had come to the colony as
indentured servants in the mid-seventeenth century but, after serving
out their term of servitude, they later established themselves as prosperous
tobacco farmers in the rich
agrarian economy of southern Maryland. Taney grew up as a Maryland
Roman Catholic with rural gentry privilege, was educated privately and
then entered Dickinson College in
1792.
While at Dickinson, Taney came under the tutelage of Dr. Charles Nisbet,
arguably one of the greatest educators
of his day. If the correspondence between Nisbet and Taney’s
father throughout 1792-1795 are any indication, the
Principal became almost a surrogate father to the young and talented
student. Taney was a leading member of the
Belles Lettres Society and graduated as valedictorian of the twenty-four
students in the class of 1795. This honor
he always valued since the students themselves at the time were responsible
for such selection.
Taney studied law under Judge Jeremiah Townley Chase in Annapolis before
being admitted to the Maryland bar on
June 19, 1799. After a brief time as a Federalist state representative,
he began his legal career in earnest in
Frederick, Maryland. There he also met and married Anne Phoebe
Charlton Key, the sister of Francis Scott Key,
in January, 1806. The couple would have six daughters.
Taney was elected to the Maryland State Senate in 1816 and came to dominate
the state's Federalists. By 1820 he
had also established himself as one of the leading attorneys in Maryland
and in September, 1827 accepted the
position of State Attorney General. As the Federalist Party faded
away, Taney looked for other political outlets. He
had always been an avid supporter and admirer of General Andrew Jackson,
acting as chairman of the Jackson
Central Committee of Maryland in the 1828 election. His
longtime support was recognized in 1831 when
President Jackson appointed him to the first of what were to be several
posts in his cabinet. He initially served as
both Attorney-General and acting Secretary of War. In a cabinet
shuffle in 1833, Jackson appointed Taney as
Secretary of the Treasury. The national controversy over the
role of the Bank of the United States dictated that this
was a highly sensitive post, but one for which Taney’s long experience
in banking law qualified him well. Taney
would serve from September 23, 1833 until his Senate confirmation was
rejected and he resigned on June 24,
1834. Jackson then sought to have him appointed to the
Supreme Court as an associate justice but this nomination was also blocked
in the Senate. Jackson persisted, however,
and on December 28, 1835, he nominated Taney to fill the vacancy on
the Court left by the death of the legendary Chief Justice John Marshall.
This time, despite the usual Whig
opposition, he was confirmed and he took the oath of office on March
28, 1836.
Taney’s actions in his first decades largely calmed initial Whig fears
that his appointment would politicize the Court and he settled into a careful
career marked by strict
construction of, not only the Constitution where it supported state
sovereignty, but also of contract, as in Charles River Bridge vs. Warren
Bridge. However, one case in particular
has been the hallmark of Taney's tenure as Chief Justice. In
1856, a seemingly unnecessary supporting case for the 1820 Missouri Compromise,
Dred Scott vs Sandford, was
allowed before the Court. Taney wrote the majority opinion in
the Scott case, confirming slaves as property by ruling against Negro citizenship
and then declaring that the
Compromise itself was unconstitutional because Congress had no right,
under the constitutional protection of private property, to bar slavery
from new territories.
As a child of Southern gentry, Taney immediately came under extreme
Republican attack for this decision. He was personally opposed to
slavery, having freed his own slaves, but
his southern sensibilities and his own intimate knowledge of the institution
led to his belief in the common southern anti-slavery solution of repatriation,
as opposed to abolition.
The case dogged the rest of his nine years as Chief Justice, even though
he displayed a certain judicial brilliance in his later decisions with
long and thoughtful opinions on the
role of the states and national government in fugitive slave cases,
in Ableman v. Booth just before the Civil War, and on the rights of civilians
in wartime in Ex Parte Merryman
during the conflict itself.
Plagued all of his life with ill health and never a rich man, Chief
Justice Roger Brooke Taney died on October 12, 1864, unmourned by most
Northern supporters of a war against
rebellion he believed privately the Union had no legal right to wage.
He was 87 years old.