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  1. www.oyez.org › people › samuel_chaseSamuel Chase | Oyez

    Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Remembered largely as the only Supreme Court justice to ever have faced impeachment proceedings, Samuel Chase served as an associate justice from 1796 to 1811. Chase was born in 1741 in Maryland as the only child of Reverend Thomas Chase and his wife, Matilda Walker.

  2. Samuel Chase (ur. 17 kwietnia 1741 roku; zm. 19 czerwca 1811 roku) – prawnik i polityk amerykański. Był delegatem do Kongresu Kontynentalnego , na którym 2 sierpnia 1776 roku jako przedstawiciel stanu Maryland podpisał deklarację niepodległości Stanów Zjednoczonych .

  3. 15. Apr. 2023 · The first and only Supreme Court justice to be impeached was Samuel Chase of Maryland in 1805, and he was, in the end, acquitted. I mentioned Chase in my column on Tuesday as one of the anti ...

  4. U.S. statesman Samuel Chase was an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1796 to 1811. His acquittal in an impeachment trial of 1805 inspired by President Thomas Jefferson for political reasons strengthened the independence of the judiciary. Chase was born on April 17, 1741, in Princess Anne, Md.

  5. Samuel Chase Impeached. March 12, 1804. Supreme Court justice Samuel Chase, an ardent Federalist supporter, was known for his open partisanship both on and off the bench. He campaigned vigorously for John Adams in the election of 1800, and in 1803, gave a grand jury charge in the U.S. circuit court in Maryland that was sharply critical of the ...

  6. 1. Aug. 2023 · Samuel Chase was a significant figure in early American history, known for his fiery temperament and influential role in the Revolutionary War. Born in Somerset County, Maryland, in 1741, Chase’s early years were marked by adversity, as he lost his father at a young age. Despite these challenges, Chase pursued an education in law, studying ...

  7. R. W. Carrington, The Impeachment Trial of Samuel Chase, Virginia Law Review, Vol. 9, No. 7 (May, 1923), pp. 485-500