"George Wythe, America's First Law Professor and the Teacher of Jefferson, Marshall, and Clay"

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"George Wythe, America's First Law Professor" is a 1933 M.A. thesis by W. Edwin Hemphill (1912 – 1983), from Emory University.[1] Hemphill was an archivist, historian and editor, and contributed greatly to George Wythe scholarship, among his other historical pursuits. In 1937 he received a Ph.D. from the University of Virginia, with a dissertation also on George Wythe."[2]

Cover page



GEORGE WYTHE,

AMERICA'S FIRST LAW PROFESSOR AND THE

TEACHER OF JEFFERSON, MARSHALL, AND CLAY



Title page

GEORGE WYTHE,

AMERICA'S FIRST LAW PROFESSOR AND THE

TEACHER OF JEFFERSON, MARSHALL, AND CLAY


A Thesis

Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate

School of Emory University

by


W. Edwin Hemphill

A.B., Hampton-Sydney College, 1932


In Partial Fulfillment of the

Requirements for the Degree of

Master of Arts


Emory University, Georgia

May, 1933

Preface

PREFACE

It is a surprising circumstance that no biography of George Wythe — not even a small "Life" — has ever been published. Such a treatise would be worthwhile and valuable (to mention only one reason) for the light which it would throw on the history of American education in the latter half of the eighteenth century.

The study is a preliminary step, perhaps, in that direction. Its aim is to prevent a factual and interpretative account of George Wythe's legal professsorship and of his relationships with his three greatest pupils. An adequate consideration of the influence upon American history which he exerted directly through them could not be confirmed within the present scope, but in the three chapters devoted to them we have suggested at least the main trends which future thought on the subject will follow.

The most complete edition of the writings of Jefferson, that published by the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association, has been used throughout whenever possible; its lacunae must be filled from a number of sources.

Table of contents

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
    (page)
PREFACE    
CHAPTER    
I.      INTRODUCTION 1
II.      THE EDUCATION OF THE EDUCATOR 7
III.      HIS INSTRUCTION OF JEFFERSON 13
IV.      HIS PROFESSORSHIP OF LAW

     A. Its Establishment
     B. Its Priority
     C. Its Nature
     D. Jefferson's Opinion of It
     E. Its Duration and Termination

37
V.      HIS INSTRUCTION OF MARSHALL 68
VI.      HIS INSTRUCTION OF CLAY 82
APPENDIX   i
BIBLIOGRAPHY   vi

Page 1

See also

References

  1. Hemphill, William Edwin, "George Wythe: America's First Law Professor and the Teacher of Jefferson, Marshall and Clay," MA thesis, Emory University, 1933.
  2. Hemphill, "George Wythe the Colonial Briton: A Biographical Study of the Pre-Revolutionary Era in Virginia," PhD diss., University of Virginia, 1937.