Volume IV Part 68 (2/2)
[1567] Story to Peters, June 19, 1835, Story, II, 199-200.
[1568] Chapman to Brockenbrough, July 6, 1835, quoted in the Richmond _Enquirer_, July 10, 1835. Marshall died ”at the Boarding House of Mrs.
Crim, Walnut street below Fourth.” (Philadelphia _Inquirer_, July 7, 1835.) Three of Marshall's sons were with him when he died. His eldest son, Thomas, when hastening to his father's bedside, had been killed in Baltimore by the fall upon his head of bricks from a chimney blown down by a sudden and violent storm. Marshall was not informed of his son's death.
[1569] Terhune, 98.
[1570] Philadelphia _Inquirer_, July 7, 1835.
[1571] Niles, XLVIII, 322.
[1572] Richmond _Enquirer_ July 10, 1835.
[1573] _Ib._
[1574] Richmond _Whig and Public Advertiser_, July 10, 1835.
[1575] Richmond _Enquirer_, July 14, 1835.
[1576] See Sargent, I, 299. If the statements in the newspapers and magazines of the time are to be trusted, even the death of Jefferson called forth no such public demonstrations as were accorded Marshall.
[1577] Niles, XLVIII, 321.
[1578] Undoubtedly William Leggett, one of the editors. See Leggett: _A Collection of Political Writings_, II, 3-7.
[1579] As reprinted in _Richmond Whig and Public Advertiser_, July 14, 1835.
[1580] Richmond _Enquirer_, July 21, 1835.
[1581] _Ib._
[1582] _Ib._ July 17, 1835.
[1583] Alexandria _Gazette_, Aug. 13, 1835, reprinted in the Richmond _Enquirer_, Aug. 21, 1835.
[1584] Magruder: _John Marshall_, 282.
[1585] Story, II, 206.
THE END
WORKS CITED IN THIS VOLUME
WORKS CITED IN THIS VOLUME
_The material given in parentheses and following certain t.i.tles indicates the form in which those t.i.tles have been cited in the footnotes._
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