Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Lists of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lists of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States
Remove ads
Remove ads

The lists of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States cover the law clerks who have assisted the justices of the Supreme Court of the United States in various capacities since the first one was hired by Justice Horace Gray in 1882.[1] The list is divided into separate lists for each position in the Supreme Court.

Thumb

Each justice is permitted to have three or four law clerks per Court term. Most clerks are recent law school graduates, who have typically graduated at the top of their class and spent at least one year clerking for a lower federal judge.[2][3] Among their many functions, clerks do legal research that assists justices in deciding what cases to accept and what questions to ask during oral arguments, prepare memoranda, and draft orders and opinions.[4] Research suggests that clerks exert a moderate influence on how justices vote in cases, but have "substantial influence in cases that are high-profile, legally significant, or close decisions".[5]

Remove ads

Current justices

The justices as of 2023 with links to their past and present law clerks:

Lists by seat

Summarize
Perspective
Morrison Waite  Melville Fuller  Edward D. White   William H. Taft  Charles E. Hughes  Harlan F. Stone  Fred M. Vinson  Earl Warren  Warren Burger  William Rehnquist  John Roberts
Samuel Blatchford  Edward D. White  Willis Van Devanter  Hugo Black  Lewis Powell  Anthony Kennedy  Brett Kavanaugh
Horace Gray  Oliver W. Holmes  Benjamin Cardozo  Felix Frankfurter   Arthur Goldberg  Abe Fortas  Harry Blackmun  Stephen Breyer  Ketanji Brown Jackson
William Woods  Lucius Lamar II  Howell Jackson  Rufus Peckham  Horace Lurton  James McReynolds  James Byrnes  Wiley Rutledge  Sherman Minton  William Brennan  David Souter  Sonia Sotomayor
Samuel Miller  Henry Brown  William Moody  Joseph Lamar  Louis Brandeis  William O. Douglas  John P. Stevens  Elena Kagan
Stanley Matthews  David Brewer  Charles E. Hughes  John Clarke  George Sutherland  Stanley Reed  Charles Whittaker  Byron White  Ruth Bader Ginsburg  Amy Coney Barrett
John M. Harlan  Mahlon Pitney  Edward Sanford  Owen Roberts  Harold Burton  Potter Stewart  Sandra Day O'Connor  Samuel Alito
Stephen Field  Joseph McKenna  Harlan Stone  Robert Jackson  John M. Harlan  William Rehnquist  Antonin Scalia  Neil Gorsuch
Joseph Bradley  George Shiras  William Day  Pierce Butler  Frank Murphy  Tom Clark  Thurgood Marshall  Clarence Thomas

Note: There are no official numbers for the individual seats of associate justice. The numbering of associate justice seats 1–4 reflects the order of precedence of the inaugural justices to occupy those seats, which was based upon the seniority of their commission from President George Washington following their confirmation by the U.S. Senate. The fifth original associate justice seat, and the simultaneously created seventh and eighth seats, are numbered according to the order in which each seat's first occupant received their commission from the president following Senate confirmation. Seats six, nine, and 10 are numbered according to the order in which each was created by statute. Also, due to the several changes in the size of the Court since it was established in 1789, two seats have been abolished, both as a result of the Judicial Circuits Act of 1866 (and before the Court established the practice of hiring law clerks). Consequently, neither "seat 5" nor "seat 7" has a list article. Also, the seat numbers in these articles are not derived from official United States federal government sources, but are used as a way of organizing and detailing the succession of justices over the years since the first set of justices were confirmed by the United States Senate.

Remove ads

Notable clerks

References

Loading content...
Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads