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Samuel Chase

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This article is about the signer of the Declaration of Independence. For the U.S. Congressman, see Samuel Chase (congressman). For the Chief Justice, see Salmon P. Chase.
Samuel Chase painting by John Beale Bordley (1836).

Samuel Chase (April 17, 1741June 19, 1811), was an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court and a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of Maryland. He was well-known as a Federalist-partisan.

His youth and early career

Samuel was the son of the Rev. Thomas Chase, an Episcopal priest who had immigrated to Somerset County, Maryland. In 1743 the family moved to Baltimore where his father took up a new pulpit. Samuel was educated at home until he was eighteen when he left for Annapolis to read law. He was admitted to the bar in 1761 and started a law practice in Annapolis.

His service as a justice

In 1774 he represented Maryland at the Continental Congress, and was re-elected in 1775, serving until 1778. In 1786 Chase moved to Baltimore, which remained his home for the rest of his life. That same year he was appointed chief justice of the District Criminal Court in Baltimore, and then became Chief Justice of the Maryland General Court. In 1796 he was appointed an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, serving there until his death. He was thought by many to suffer from recurring mental illness.

The impeachment proceedings

Chase was served with 6 articles of impeachment by the House of Representatives in late 1804, explicitly over Chase's handling of the trial of John Fries. Two more articles would later be added. The Jeffersonian Republican-controlled United States Senate began an impeachment trial against Justice Chase in early 1805. He was charged with political bias, but was acquitted by the Senate of all charges on March 1, 1805. To this day, he remains the only Supreme Court justice to be impeached. His acquittal is believed to have ensured that an independent Federal judiciary would survive partisan challenge in the U.S.

  • Patrick Hines played Samuel Chase in the Broadway musical (as well as the 1972 movie adaptation) 1776.
Preceded by Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
February 4, 1796June 19, 1811
Succeeded by

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