The quiz:
- Name two presidents who might be judged as "failed president; accomplished lawyer."
- Name two presidents who might be judged as "great president; not a great lawyer."
- Which president obtained a patent and had a case load that was nearly one-half debt collection cases?
- Most sources do not list this person as one of our lawyer-presidents; a few do.
- Name the lawyer-president who served as the appellate lawyer in the Amistad case dealing with possession of seized slaves and the sitting president-lawyer when that controversial case was decided.
- He had the greatest legal resume of all the lawyer-presidents.
- This self-described “country lawyer” read for the law, rarely appeared in court, and handled matters involving real estate, mortgages, and title disputes.
- He took law classes at Michigan, Yale, and UNC - Chapel Hill and later served as president.
- Harvard conferred an honorary LL.D. upon a lawyer-president, although another lawyer-president complained of bestowing such honors “upon a barbarian who could not write a sentence of grammar and could hardly spell his own name.” Name the two lawyer-presidents.
- He self-deprecatingly described his private law practice as, "Unpaid bills a specialty. Briefs on the liquor question furnished free to ladies. Small dogs chloroformed without charge."
- Name three schools that can claim that at least two lawyer-presidents took law classes there.
- Bonus Question: Which lawyers argued cases before the US Supreme Court and also served as president?
Answers below
Answers below
Answers:
- Name two presidents who might be judged as "failed president; accomplished lawyer." Two that come to mind are Franklin Pierce and Richard Nixon.
- Name two presidents who might be judged as "great president; not a great lawyer." FDR, Polk, and Wilson, for example. (One might argue about Andrew Jackson, but by conventional measures he had his successes as a lawyer. See question 9 below.)
- Which president obtained a patent and had a case load that was nearly one-half debt collection cases? Lincoln.
- Most sources do not list this person as one of our lawyer-presidents; a few do. Madison.
- Name the lawyer-president who served as the appellate lawyer in the Amistad case dealing with possession of seized slaves and the sitting president-lawyer when that controversial case was decided. John Quincy Adams and Van Buren.
- He had the greatest legal resume of all the lawyer-presidents. Taft.
- This self-described “country lawyer” read for the law, rarely appeared in court, and handled matters involving real estate, mortgages, and title disputes. Calvin Coolidge.
- He took law classes at Michigan, Yale, and UNC - Chapel Hill and later served as president. Gerald Ford.
- Harvard conferred an honorary LL.D. upon a lawyer-president, although another lawyer-president complained of bestowing such honors “upon a barbarian who could not write a sentence of grammar and could hardly spell his own name.” Name the two lawyer-presidents. Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams.
- He self-deprecatingly described his private law practice as, "Unpaid bills a specialty. Briefs on the liquor question furnished free to ladies. Small dogs chloroformed without charge." FDR.
- Name three schools that can claim that at least two lawyer-presidents took law classes there. UNC, Yale, Harvard, William & Mary, Columbia.
- Bonus Question: Which lawyers argued cases before the US Supreme Court and also served as president? John Quincy Adams, Polk, Lincoln, Garfield, Cleveland, Harrison, Taft, Nixon.