![West facade of the U.S. Supreme Court building.[Credits : Franz Jantzen/Supreme Court of the United States]](http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/27/97027-003-A1D4D855.gif)
![The courtroom of the Supreme Court of the United States.[Credits : Franz Jantzen/Supreme Court of the United States]](http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/24/97024-003-EF10CCC2.gif)
final court of appeal and final expositor of the Constitution of the United States. Within the framework of litigation, the Supreme Court marks the boundaries of authority between state and nation, state and state, and government and citizen. (For a list of justices of the U.S. Supreme Court, see table.)
| Supreme Court justices, U.S. chief justices in italic |
||
| name | term of service* | appointed by president |
| John Jay | 1789-95 | Washington |
| James Wilson | 1789-98 | Washington |
| John Rutledge | 1790-91 | Washington |
| William Cushing | 1790-1810 | Washington |
| John Blair | 1790-96 | Washington |
| James Iredell | 1790-99 | Washington |
| Thomas Johnson | 1792-93 | Washington |
| William Paterson | 1793-1806 | Washington |
| John Rutledge** | 1795 | Washington |
| Samuel Chase | 1796-1811 | Washington |
| Oliver Ellsworth | 1796-1800 | Washington |
| Bushrod Washington | 1799-1829 | J. Adams |
| Alfred Moore | 1800-04 | J. Adams |
| John Marshall | 1801-35 | J. Adams |
| William Johnson | 1804-34 | Jefferson |
| Henry Brockholst Livingston | 1807-23 | Jefferson |
| Thomas Todd | 1807-26 | Jefferson |
| Gabriel Duvall | 1811-35 | Madison |
| Joseph Story | 1812-45 | Madison |
| Smith Thompson | 1823-43 | Monroe |
| Robert Trimble | 1826-28 | J.Q. Adams |
| John McLean | 1830-61 | Jackson |
| Henry Baldwin | 1830-44 | Jackson |
| James M. Wayne | 1835-67 | Jackson |
| Roger Brooke Taney | 1836-64 | Jackson |
| Philip P. Barbour | 1836-41 | Jackson |
| John Catron | 1837-65 | Van Buren |
| John McKinley | 1838-52 | Van Buren |
| Peter V. Daniel | 1842-60 | Van Buren |
| Samuel Nelson | 1845-72 | Tyler |
| Levi Woodbury | 1845-51 | Polk |
| Robert C. Grier | 1846-70 | Polk |
| Benjamin R. Curtis | 1851-57 | Fillmore |
| John Archibald Campbell | 1853-61 | Pierce |
| Nathan Clifford | 1858-81 | Buchanan |
| Noah H. Swayne | 1862-81 | Lincoln |
| Samuel Freeman Miller | 1862-90 | Lincoln |
| David Davis | 1862-77 | Lincoln |
| Stephen Johnson Field | 1863-97 | Lincoln |
| Salmon P. Chase | 1864-73 | Lincoln |
| William Strong | 1870-80 | Grant |
| Joseph P. Bradley | 1870-92 | Grant |
| Ward Hunt | 1873-82 | Grant |
| Morrison Remick Waite | 1874-88 | Grant |
| John Marshall Harlan | 1877-1911 | Hayes |
| William B. Woods | 1881-87 | Hayes |
| Stanley Matthews | 1881-89 | Garfield |
| Horace Gray | 1882-1902 | Arthur |
| Samuel Blatchford | 1882-93 | Arthur |
| Lucius Q.C. Lamar | 1888-93 | Cleveland |
| Melville Weston Fuller | 1888-1910 | Cleveland |
| David J. Brewer | 1890-1910 | B. Harrison |
| Henry B. Brown | 1891-1906 | B. Harrison |
| George Shiras, Jr. | 1892-1903 | B. Harrison |
| Howell E. Jackson | 1893-95 | B. Harrison |
| Edward Douglass White | 1894-1910 | Cleveland |
| Rufus Wheeler Peckham | 1896-1909 | Cleveland |
| Joseph McKenna | 1898-1925 | McKinley |
| Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. | 1902-32 | T. Roosevelt |
| William R. Day | 1903-22 | T. Roosevelt |
| William H. Moody | 1906-10 | T. Roosevelt |
| Horace H. Lurton | 1910-14 | Taft |
| Charles Evans Hughes | 1910-16 | Taft |
| Willis Van Devanter | 1911-37 | Taft |
| Joseph R. Lamar | 1911-16 | Taft |
| Edward Douglass White | 1910-21 | Taft |
| Mahlon Pitney | 1912-22 | Taft |
| James C. McReynolds | 1914-41 | Wilson |
| Louis Brandeis | 1916-39 | Wilson |
| John H. Clarke | 1916-22 | Wilson |
| William Howard Taft | 1921-30 | Harding |
| George Sutherland | 1922-38 | Harding |
| Pierce Butler | 1923-39 | Harding |
| Edward T. Sanford | 1923-30 | Harding |
| Harlan Fiske Stone | 1925-41 | Coolidge |
| Charles Evans Hughes | 1930-41 | Hoover |
| Owen Roberts | 1930-45 | Hoover |
| Benjamin Nathan Cardozo | 1932-38 | Hoover |
| Hugo L. Black | 1937-71 | F. Roosevelt |
| Stanley F. Reed | 1938-57 | F. Roosevelt |
| Felix Frankfurter | 1939-62 | F. Roosevelt |
| William O. Douglas | 1939-75 | F. Roosevelt |
| Frank Murphy | 1940-49 | F. Roosevelt |
| Harlan Fiske Stone | 1941-46 | F. Roosevelt |
| James F. Byrnes | 1941-42 | F. Roosevelt |
| Robert H. Jackson | 1941-54 | F. Roosevelt |
| Wiley B. Rutledge | 1943-49 | F. Roosevelt |
| Harold H. Burton | 1945-58 | Truman |
| Fred M. Vinson | 1946-53 | Truman |
| Tom C. Clark | 1949-67 | Truman |
| Sherman Minton | 1949-56 | Truman |
| Earl Warren | 1953-69 | Eisenhower |
| John Marshall Harlan | 1955-71 | Eisenhower |
| William J. Brennan, Jr. | 1956-90 | Eisenhower |
| Charles E. Whittaker | 1957-62 | Eisenhower |
| Potter Stewart | 1958-81 | Eisenhower |
| Byron R. White | 1962-93 | Kennedy |
| Arthur J. Goldberg | 1962-65 | Kennedy |
| Abe Fortas | 1965-69 | L. Johnson |
| Thurgood Marshall | 1967-91 | L. Johnson |
| Warren E. Burger | 1969-86 | Nixon |
| Harry A. Blackmun | 1970-94 | Nixon |
| Lewis F. Powell, Jr. | 1972-87 | Nixon |
| William H. Rehnquist | 1972-86 | Nixon |
| John Paul Stevens | 1975- | Ford |
| Sandra Day O’Connor | 1981-2006 | Reagan |
| William H. Rehnquist | 1986-2005 | Reagan |
| Antonin Scalia | 1986- | Reagan |
| Anthony M. Kennedy | 1988- | Reagan |
| David H. Souter | 1990- | G.H.W. Bush |
| Clarence Thomas | 1991- | G.H.W. Bush |
| Ruth Bader Ginsburg | 1993- | Clinton |
| Stephen G. Breyer | 1994- | Clinton |
| John G. Roberts, Jr. | 2005- | G.W. Bush |
| Samuel A. Alito | 2006- | G.W. Bush |
| *The date the justice took the judicial oath is here used as the beginning date of service, for until that oath is taken the justice is not vested with the prerogatives of the office. Justices, however, receive their commissions ("letters patent") before taking their oaths--in some instances, in the preceding year. **John Rutledge was acting chief justice; the U.S. Senate refused to confirm him. |
||
The Supreme Court was created by the Constitutional Convention of 1787 as the head of a federal court system, though it was not formally established until Congress passed the Judiciary Act in 1789. Although the Constitution outlined the powers, structure, and functions of the legislative and executive branches of government in some detail, it did not do the same for the judicial branch, leaving much of that responsibility to Congress and stipulating only that judicial power be “vested in one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish.” As the country’s court of last resort, the Supreme Court is an appellate body, vested with the authority to act in cases arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States; in controversies to which the United States is a party; in disputes between states or between citizens of different states; and in cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction. In suits affecting ambassadors, other public ministers, and consuls and in cases in which states are a party, the Supreme Court has original jurisdiction—i.e., it serves as a trial court. Relatively few cases reach the court through its original jurisdiction, however; instead, the vast majority of the court’s business and nearly all of its most influential decisions derive from its appellate jurisdiction.
West-facade-of-the-US-Supreme-Court-buildingWest facade of the U.S. Supreme Court building.[Credits : Franz Jantzen/Supreme Court of the United States]
The-courtroom-of-the-Supreme-Court-of-the-United-StatesThe courtroom of the Supreme Court of the United States.[Credits : Franz Jantzen/Supreme Court of the United States]
PresPres. George W. Bush posing with members of the U.S. Supreme Court during Chief Justice John …[Credits : Eric Draper/The White House]
James-Earle-Frasers-Contemplation-of-Justice-on-the-north-sideJames Earle Fraser’s Contemplation of Justice, on the north side of …[Credits : Lois Long/Supreme Court of the United States]
The-Old-Supreme-Court-Chamber-where-the-court-sat-fromThe Old Supreme Court Chamber, where the court sat from 1810 to 1860.[Credits : Franz Jantzen/Supreme Court of the United States]
The-Old-Senate-Chamber-where-the-Supreme-Court-of-theThe Old Senate Chamber, where the Supreme Court of the United States sat from 1860 to 1935, c. …[Credits : Franz Jantzen/Supreme Court of the United States]
Bronze-entrance-doors-to-the-Supreme-Court-of-the-UnitedBronze entrance doors to the Supreme Court of the United States.[Credits : Franz Jantzen/Supreme Court of the United States]
Portraits-of-US-chief-justices-John-Jay-John-Rutledge-OliverPortraits of U.S. chief justices John Jay, John Rutledge, Oliver Ellsworth, John Marshall, Roger B. …[Credits : Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (neg. no. LC-USZ62-17681)]
Learn how appeals arrive at the U.S. Supreme Court.[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
Hubert Humphrey discusses the workings of the U.S. Supreme Court.[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
MarburyMadison and the Dred Scott case …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
In the 1950s and ’60s many U.S. Supreme Court decisions involved the First and Fourteenth …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
During the Industrial Revolution, decisions such as Lochner v. New York exemplified the Court’s …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
PlessyFerguson and …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
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