Sunday, February 1, 2026

Courtmaker: Chief Justice John Marshall (2025)

 


 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Courtmaker: John Marshall and the Forging of America’s Supreme Court is a documentary film which premiered on US television (PBS) in 2025. It is about the life and career of the American lawyer John Marshall (1755-1835).

 

Here is some basic information about this film:

 

** Director: Leo Eaton                 

** Writers: Leo Easton and Richard Brookhiser

** Presenter: Richard Brookhiser

** Based on the book John Marshall, the Man Who Made the Supreme Court by Richard Brookhiser (2018)

** Run time: 117 minutes

 

Many historical and legal experts are interviewed in this film. Here are the names of the participants. Listed in alphabetical order:

 

** Bruce Ackerman – professor of law, Yale University, CT

** Samuel Alito – Justice, the US Supreme Court

** Akhil Amar – professor of law, Yale University, CT

** Randy Barnett – professor of law, Georgetown University

** James G. Basker – president, Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History

 

** Jonathan Bryant – professor of history, Georgia Southern University, GA

** Guido Calabresi – judge, Second US Circuit, Court of Appeals

** Christine A. Desan – professor of law, Harvard University, MA

** Paul Finkelman – legal historian, President, Gratz College, PA

** Joanne B. Freeman – professor of history, Yale University, CT

 

** Gerald Gaidmore – Director of special collections, College of William & Mary, VA

** Robert P. George – professor of jurisprudence, Princeton University, NJ

** Risa L. Goluboff – Dean, school of law, University of Virginia

** Annette Gordon-Reed – professor of law and history, Harvard University, MA

** Charles Gourd – executive director, Cherokee Heritage Center, Tahlequah, OK

 

** Mark Greenough – historian, Virginia State Capitol

** Charles Hobson – historian, editor of John Marshall papers

** Nancy Isenberg – professor of history, Louisiana State University

** Elizabeth S. Kostelny – CEO Preservation Virginia

** Daniel A. Laliberte – captain, US Coast Guard (retired)

 

** Allison Larsen – professor of law, College of William & Mary, VA

** R. Kent Newmyer – professor of law and history, University of Connecticut

** Donald E. Pease – Humanities Professor, Dartmouth College, NH

** Randal K. Quarles – vice chair, Federal Reserve Board of Governors

** Julie Reed – professor of law, Penn State University, PA

 

** John Roberts – Chief Justice, the US Supreme Court

** Jeffrey Rosen – president and CEO, National Constitution Center, Philadelphia, PA

** Andrew Shaw – James River Bateau Festival

** Kate Stith – professor of law, Yale University, CT

** Kevin Walsh – professor of law, University of Richmond, VA

 

*****

 

The lawyer John Marshall was a member of the US Congress 1799-1800. He represented Virginia in the House of Representatives.

 

He was a member of the US government 1800-1801. He was Secretary of State, which is the American title for a minister of foreign affairs.

 

He was a member of the Supreme Court. He was chief justice for more than thirty years (1801-1835).

 

Less than one hundred American men have held constitutional office in all three branches of the American political system. John Marshall is a member of this exclusive club

 

*****

 

The lawyer John Marshall was a member of the Federalist Party. He wanted the US to have a relatively strong federal government to hold the nation together.

 

His cousin the politician Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) was opposed to federalism. He wanted the US to have a relatively weak federal government, because he supported states’ rights.

 

John Marshal and Thomas Jefferson did not like each other. They were not good friends. The conflict between them was political and personal.

 

When John Marshall was chief justice and when Thomas Jefferson was president, there was a serious conflict between the judicial and the executive branches of the American political system.

 

*****

 

As chief justice of the US Supreme Court for more than thirty years, Marshall was involved in numerous cases about many different aspects of American society.

 

This film focuses on eight cases which are regarded as the most important cases which were heard by the court while he was chief justice. Here is the list:

 

** Marbury v. Madison (1803)

** The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr (1807)

** Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819)

** McCullogh v. Maryland (1819)

 

** Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)

** The Antelope Case (1825)

** Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831)

** Worcester v. Georgia (1832)

 

The following case which took place after the death of John Marshall is also mentioned and discussed:

 

** Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)

 

Many historians and legal scholars regard the ruling in this case as the worst ruling in the history of the US Supreme Court

 

*****

 

While the focus of this film is on Marshall as a lawyer and chief justice of the US Supreme Court, his private and personal life is also covered.

 

In 1783, he married Mary Wallis Ambler (1766-1831), whose nickname was Polly. John and Polly had ten children, but only six lived long enough to become adults. Five sons and one daughter.

 

The children are not as famous as their father. Three of the five sons became a politician:

 

** Thomas C. Marshall (1784-1835)

** James Keith Marshall (1800-1862)

** Edward Carrington Marshall (1805-1882)

 

*****

 

This film shows how and why the lawyer John Marshall is regarded as an important person in the early history of the United States:

 

** He established what is known as judicial review

** He strengthened federal power

** He unified the court

** He defined the constitution

** He is still the longest-serving chief justice of the US Supreme Court

 

Is he flawless? Did he always make the right decision? The answer to these questions is no. He was talented. And he was often wise. But not always right.

 

When I look at the eight cases which are covered in this film, I have to say that the ruling in the Antelope Case of 1825 marks the low point in his long career as chief justice, while the ruling in Worcester v. Georgia of 1832 marks the high point in his long career as chief justice.

 

The Antelope Case is about slavery. In this case, he failed to do what was right, not as a lawyer, but as a human being. He was a slave-owner. He backed away.

 

Worcester v. Georgia is about the Native Americans, more precisely the Cherokee Nation. In this case, he made the right choice. His ruling supported the rights of the Cherokee Nation.

 

Sadly, his ruling was ignored by the president and by the US Congress. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 had been signed by president Andrew Jackson.

 

The act was deemed illegal by the Supreme Court, but the court had no means to enforce it. The illegal act was implemented 1838-1839.

 

The enforcement of the illegal act - a dark chapter of American history – is known as the Trail of Tears.

 

*****

 

What do reviewers say about this film? This question is not easy to answer. The film is listed on Amazon, but there are no ratings, no reviews. The film is listed on IMDb, but there is no rating.

 

Only one user review is posted on the website. The headline says: “Well Done and Informative Early American History.” The rating is 80 percent.

 

I agree with the user review posted on IMDb. This film is well-done. The historical and legal experts who are interviewed are well-chosen.

 

The topic is important. The story deserves to be told, and in this film, it is done quite well. I think this product deserves a rating of four stars (80 percent).

 

REFERENCES

 

# 1. Some general works

 

John Marshall: Definer of a Nation

By Jean Edward Smith

(1996 = hardcover)

(1998 = paperback)

 

John Marshall:

The Man Who Made the Supreme Court

By Richard Brookhiser

(2018)

 

Without Precedent:

Chief Justice Marshall and his Times

By Joel Richard Paul

(2018 = hardcover)

(2019 = paperback)

 

The Life of John Marshall:

Chief Justice of the Supreme Court

By Albert J. Beveridge

(2022) (two volumes)

 

# 2. Some specific topics

 

My Dearest Polly: Letters of Chief Justice John Marshall to His Wife, 1779-1831

Edited by Frances Norton Mason

(1961)

 

Trail of Tears:

The Rise and fall of the Cherokee Nation

By John Ehle

(1988)

 

Dark Places of the Earth:

The Voyage of the Slave Ship Antelope

By Jonathan Bryant

(2015)

 

*****

 

The American lawyer

John Marshall

(1755-1835)

Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court

1801-1835

 

***** 

 

Mary Willis Ambler

(her nickname was Polly)

(1866-1831)

Wife of John Marshall

1783-1831 

 

*****


The American politician

Thomas Jefferson

(1743-1826)

President of the United States

1801-1809

 

*****

 

 

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