440:..."What, indeed, is true civilization ? By its fruit you shall know it. It is not dominion, wealth, material luxury - nay, not even a great literature and education widespread, good though these things be. Civilization is not a veneer; it must penetrate to the very heart and core of societies of men. Its true signs are thought for the poor and suffering, chivalrous regard and respect for women, the frank recognition of human brotherhood, irrespective of race or color or nation or religion; the narrowing of the domain of mere force as a governing factor in the world, the love of ordered freedom, abhorrence of what is mean and cruel and vile, ceaseless devotion to the claims of justice. Civilization in that, its true, its highest sense, must make for Peace."
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653:. Storey was introduced to Sumner through his father, and moved to the Senator's house after his graduation from Harvard University. He accepted the position as it seemed the best route to continue his legal studies. Storey spent two years of his life as the Senator's right-hand man and one of his only friends, as the progressive Sumner had made many enemies in Washington. During his tenure, he initially supported the removal of President
762:
622:. The camping party encountered a fierce storm on their second night out, and Storey worked to lighten the mood by singing through storm, with the younger Emerson joining in to sing the chorus. The event is recorded in Ralph Waldo Emerson's journals of the time. The two men's friendship continued for the next several decades, and they wrote a biography of former
31:
484:(NAACP), from its founding in 1909 until his death in 1929. According to his biographer Hixson, he "launched and maintained the effective campaign to achieve the total destruction of the legal embodiment of white supremacy." He guided NAACP's legal challenges to discriminatory laws that violated the
385:
Storey was known to work 16-hour days, even into his later years. He was a fighter for unpopular issues, and as Bliss Perry wrote in his obituary for Storey, he was "usually in the minority at any given time." Storey himself was quoted as saying "It is not success to fight on the winning side. It is
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in their appeals from convictions for murder and the death penalty. The NAACP raised $ 50,000 for their defense, hiring two attorneys to manage the appeals in
Arkansas. The cases were broken into two tracks because of technical trial issues, and six men (Ware et al.) were retried beginning in May
587:
in 1929, survived by four of his five children with
Gertrude Cutts, whom he had married in 1870. She had died in 1912. His children were Charles Moorfield Storey, Elizabeth Storey Lovett, Richard Storey, Gertude Storey Burke and Katharine Storey Donald.
382:. From 1905 until its dissolution in 1921 Storey was the Anti-Imperialist League's President. He perceived that "national subjugation overseas and racial persecution at home were related," which drove his efforts at reform.
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1920 after their defense team won the first appeal at the state supreme court. Storey worked with the team as the cases of six other men (Moore et al.) later reached the United States
Supreme Court. In its ruling in
614:. The two were in the same graduating class at Harvard. Just after their graduation, Storey was one of two friends that accompanied Emerson on a camping trip. Also among the party was the elder Emerson, as well as
413:
Late in the campaign of 1900, Storey seriously pondered running for president on a third-party ticket but decided against it as impractical. Instead, he ran a losing, but spirited and high-profile campaign for
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success to fight bravely for a principle even if one does not live to see it triumph." This determination to fight for the right, even if he did not win, led him to cross political swords with
Presidents
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amendments, especially related to disenfranchisement and segregation of blacks in the South, and led several important NAACP legal victories. Most notably, he was lead counsel before the
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blacks by specific city blocks. The Court's opinion reflected the jurisprudence of property rights and freedom of contract as embodied in the earlier precedent it had established in
597:
1691:
1538:
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282:, Storey discussed the mindset of the young men of his generation, stating that "a great movement for intellectual, religious, and political freedom was just culminating".
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On
February 17, 1916, he testified in opposition to the nomination of Louis D. Brandeis to the United States Supreme Court. Storey was on the conservative side in the
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465:," he declared, "but when he governs himself and also governs another man, that is more than self-government–that is
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as the chairperson of the Haiti-Santo
Domingo Independence Society. He was also on the advisory committee of the
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mass meeting in Boston in June 1898, called because of the
Spanish–American War. He was a vice president of the
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One of Storey's favourite quotes attributed to Lord
Russell may have inspired his views on civil rights,
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548:(1923), the Court set an important precedent for reviewing state criminal cases against the standard of the
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234:(NAACP), serving from 1909 to his death in 1929. He opposed United States expansionism beginning with the
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Kitching, W. (1903). “Worse Things Than War!” The
Advocate of Peace (1894-1920), 65(7), 128–128.
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Storey consistently and aggressively championed civil rights, not only for blacks but also for
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214:. According to Storey's biographer, William B. Hixson Jr., he had a worldview that embodied "
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206:(March 19, 1845 – October 24, 1929) was an American lawyer, anti-imperial activist, and
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and immigrants. He opposed immigration restrictions, and supported racial equality and
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1011:. No. 64th Cong., 1st Sess. Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee. 1916.
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1105:"The Party of Jefferson: What the Democrats can learn from a dead libertarian lawyer"
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Vol. 45, No. 3 (September 1972), pp. 451–453, via JSTOR, accessed
February 15, 2016.
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anti-imperialist candidate. Other planks in his platform included support for the
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Vol. 48, No. 3 (Autumn, 1989), pp. 289–291, via JSTOR, accessed 17 February 2016.
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as a founding partner of the firm Storey, Thorndike, Palmer, Dodge (Currently "
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Writer and Editor Damon W. Root touted Storey as an historical role model for
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and moral tone in government." Storey served as the founding president of the
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Fiat Justitia, A History of the Massachusetts Bar Association, 1910–1985
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250:, then a suburb of Boston. His family was descended from the earliest
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William B. Hixson, "Moorfield Storey and the Struggle for Equality."
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258:. Storey's father was a Boston lawyer. The young Storey went to the
936:"Gold Democrats and the Decline of Classical Liberalism, 1896–1900"
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from office but soon became disenchanted by what he viewed as the
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Afro-Academic, Cultural, Technological and Scientific Olympics
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649:, and served as a private secretary to its chairman, Senator
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A Mob Intent on Death: The NAACP and the Arkansas Riot Cases
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Friendship with Edward Waldo Emerson and the Emerson family
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In 1920 Storey led the NAACP to take on the defense of the
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settlers in New England and had close connections with the
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National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
827:. The Crisis Publishing Company, Inc. pp. 156–7, 176.
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National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
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National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
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National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
502:(1917). In that case, the Court unanimously overturned a
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Portrait of an Independent: Moorfield Storey 1845-1929.
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Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
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National Democratic Party (United States) politicians
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Moorfield Storey, Edward Waldo Emerson (1911-01-01).
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of politicians on both sides. He was admitted to the
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Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
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and application of Bill of Rights to state actions.
911:. Massachusetts Bar Association. pp. 20, 129.
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United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
262:and graduated in 1862, during the beginning of the
564:In the 1920s, Storey opposed the U.S. occupations
896:. New York: P. F. Collier & Son Company.
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1127:Moorfield Storey and the Abolitionist Tradition,
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1009:Hearings on the Nomination of Louis D. Brandeis
977:Moorfield Storey and the Abolitionist Tradition
645:From 1867 to 1869, Storey was a clerk for the
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461:"When the white man governs himself, that is
370:. In addition, he wrote a book brief for the
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351:ticket in 1896. In 1887 he built a house on
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323:" movement of 1884, and actively supported
298:"). From 1873 to 1879 he was editor of the
278:. In a speech almost thirty years later at
1712:Presidents of the American Bar Association
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1027:Gunn, Sidney (1936). "Storey, Moorfield".
934:Beito, David T., and Linda Royster Beito,
274:, graduating in 1866, and then studied at
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1627:20th-century American non-fiction writers
1607:19th-century American non-fiction writers
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701:(1900) in "American Statesmen Series."
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290:Storey established a law practice in
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1697:Activists for Native American rights
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1033:. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
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996:http://www.jstor.org/stable/25752165
953:"Nothing to Excuse Our Intervention"
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368:New England Anti-Imperialist League
319:He was a well-known person in the "
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1622:20th-century American male writers
1602:19th-century American male writers
1201:Presidents and CEOs (1996–present)
884:Reynolds, Francis J., ed. (1921).
339:, Storey opposed the candidacy of
304:. He was elected president of the
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1053:The Arkansas Historical Quarterly
1007:"Testimony of Moorfield Storey".
861:Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920).
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736:delivered at Harvard, March 1920.
606:Storey was longtime friends with
308:in 1896, and was a fellow of the
1103:Root, Damon W. (December 2007).
1089:Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar: A Memoir
1030:Dictionary of American Biography
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574:American Fund for Public Service
312:. He served as president of the
1199:Executive Directors (1964–1996)
1129:Oxford University Press, 1972,
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749:Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1932.
740:The Conquest of the Philippines
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681:in a December 2007 article for
532:National Conference on Lynching
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624:United States Attorney General
610:, son of famous American poet
400:United States Secretary of War
327:. As a strong believer in the
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1617:20th-century American lawyers
1597:19th-century American lawyers
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705:The Reform of Legal Procedure
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314:Massachusetts Bar Association
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1657:American political activists
530:, the organizer of the 1919
362:, Storey spoke at the first
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1142:Journal of American History
1092:. Houghton Mifflin company.
821:Perry, Bliss (1930-05-01).
494:United States Supreme Court
409:1900 Congressional campaign
10:
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1682:Massachusetts Independents
1662:American political writers
1068:. Encyclopedia of Arkansas
979:by William B. Hixson, Jr."
893:Collier's New Encyclopedia
1677:Harvard Law School alumni
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983:The New England Quarterly
907:Brink, Robert J. (1987).
887:"Storey, Moorfield"
864:"Storey, Moorfield"
824:Moorfield Storey As a Man
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306:American Bar Association
226:fully as much as it did
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1420:Oswald Garrison Villard
1125:William B. Hixson Jr.,
620:William Ellery Channing
380:Philippine–American War
1727:Harvard College alumni
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1444:Channing Heggie Tobias
1338:Presidents (1909–1996)
1322:Cornell William Brooks
1304:Dennis Courtland Hayes
1292:Dennis Courtland Hayes
1049:by Richard C. Cortner"
870:Encyclopedia Americana
712:Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar
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585:Lincoln, Massachusetts
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353:Great Cranberry Island
341:William Jennings Bryan
248:Roxbury, Massachusetts
1702:Activists from Boston
1647:American libertarians
1480:Myrlie Evers-Williams
1144:55.3 (1968): 533-554
796:Hixson (1972), p. 39.
734:E. L. Godkin Lectures
679:libertarian Democrats
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360:military intervention
292:Boston, Massachusetts
256:abolitionist movement
212:Boston, Massachusetts
1519:NAACP Theatre Awards
1462:Margaret Bush Wilson
1318:(2013–2014, interim)
1306:(2007–2008, interim)
1294:(2004–2005, interim)
1250:James Weldon Johnson
1238:James Weldon Johnson
782:United States portal
745:Howe, M.A. DeWolfe.
718:Edward Waldo Emerson
608:Edward Waldo Emerson
601:Edward Waldo Emerson
578:American Imperialism
528:James Weldon Johnson
280:Cambridge University
236:Spanish–American War
66:Position established
1722:Writers from Boston
1707:Lawyers from Boston
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1534:NAACP Youth Council
1468:Kelly Alexander Sr.
1432:Mary White Ovington
1426:Joel Elias Spingarn
1351:Joel Elias Spingarn
1226:Mary White Ovington
1214:Mary White Ovington
951:Storey, Moorfield,
612:Ralph Waldo Emerson
513:Lochner v. New York
508:racially segregated
388:William Howard Taft
333:freedom of contract
301:American Law Review
260:Boston Latin School
77:Joel Elias Spingarn
1524:NAACP Image Awards
1357:Arthur B. Spingarn
1232:Royal Freeman Nash
973:Gawalt, Gerard W.,
940:Independent Review
729:Problems of To-Day
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629:together in 1911.
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550:Due Process Clause
521:Sacco and Vanzetti
499:Buchanan v. Warley
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616:Transcendentalist
526:Storey was, with
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476:Moorfield Storey
452:American Indians
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374:summarizing the
364:anti-imperialist
325:Grover Cleveland
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220:anti-imperialism
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72:Succeeded by
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1310:Ben Jealous
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841:|work=
663:opportunism
583:He died in
420:independent
349:third-party
102:Preceded by
62:Preceded by
1576:Categories
1560:The Crisis
1375:James Kemp
1120:References
1072:2012-07-07
714:, a Memoir
659:corruption
560:Later life
504:Louisville
486:Fourteenth
428:free trade
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376:war crimes
242:Early life
140:1845-03-19
843:ignored (
833:cite book
669:in 1869.
506:law that
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467:despotism
272:Glee Club
264:Civil War
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673:Legacy
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418:as an
398:, and
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286:Career
178:, U.S.
155:Boston
754:Notes
618:poet
1131:ISBN
913:ISBN
845:help
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