John G. Johnson : : Lawyer and Art Collector, 1841-1917 / / Barnie F. Winkelman.

John G. Johnson, who died in 1917, became a legend soon after his death. His prodigious intellect and energy, his consummate skill in court, his independence of thought and action are still spoken of with the same awe his name provoked when it was considered the magic answer to almost any knotty pro...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter University of Pennsylvania Press Package Archive 1898-1999
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Place / Publishing House:Philadelphia : : University of Pennsylvania Press, , [2016]
©1942
Year of Publication:2016
Edition:Reprint 2016
Language:English
Series:Anniversary Collection
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (338 p.)
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Description
Other title:Frontmatter --
Acknowledgments --
Contents --
Illustrations --
I. The Johnsons of Chestnut Hill --
II. The Central High School --
III. The Rush Office --
IV. The Bar and the Crisis --
V. The War Comes to the Law Academy --
VI. The Wars of the Grandfathers --
VII. The Great Popularity --
VIII. Where There's a Will --
IX. The Panic of 1873 --
X. Marriage --
XI. For Lawyers Only --
XII. The Bar Sheds Its Ruffles --
XIII. Libel and Forgery Make Headlines --
XIV. Disunion in the Union League --
XV. The Family Grows Up --
XVI. Tremendous Trifles and Some Damned Dead Horses --
XVII. Building an Art Collection --
XVIII. A Merger in Sugar --
XIX. Leader of the Bar --
XX. Mr. Johnson Goes into Conference --
XXI. The Northern Securities Case --
XXII. Bills of Divorcement --
XXIII. Dissolutions in Oil and Tobacco --
XXIV. The Private Gallery of Esquire Johnson --
XXV. The United States against the Steel Corporation --
XXVI. An Arch-Monopolist Grows Old --
XXVII. A Man to Remember --
XXVIII. A Legacy and an Art Heritage --
XXIX. The Legend and the Tradition --
XXX. A Question Unanswered --
Bibliography --
Index
Summary:John G. Johnson, who died in 1917, became a legend soon after his death. His prodigious intellect and energy, his consummate skill in court, his independence of thought and action are still spoken of with the same awe his name provoked when it was considered the magic answer to almost any knotty problem of law.This is the first attempt to put this remarkable, nationally famous figure between the covers of a book. His career is traced, step by step, from his humble birth, through his rapid rise in legal circles, to the crowning rewards of his later years when he was considered the most brilliant corporation lawyer in America. He is shown as a man of single-minded, tireless devotion to the study and application of the law in all its aspects, who gave equally efficient service to big clients and little. He was one of the last general practitioners of law, handling every kind of case to the total of over 10,000 in his lifetime, but his greatest reputation was made in the early years of the century when he tried the Northern Securities Case before the United States Supreme Court, The Government case against the U. S. Steel Corporation and other legal battles of the antitrust era.The story of Johnson's life is the story of his legal activities, for he had only one other genuine interest-art collecting. This aspect of his character is also described, but the book deals primarily with Johnson the living symbol of the law who well deserves this lasting record.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9781512808810
9783110442526
DOI:10.9783/9781512808810
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Barnie F. Winkelman.