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  1. The walnut and yellow pine desk John Marshall used as a lawyer, statesman, legislator, and jurist from 1780 to 1835. Marshall is the longest-serving U.S. chief justice, leading the court for 34 years and shaping it into what it is today, coequal to the executive and legislative branches of government. The first of his great cases was Marbury v.

  2. When Edward Carrington Marshall was born on 3 September 1877, in Virginia, United States, his father, Jaquelin Ambler Marshall, was 33 and his mother, Mary Douthat, was 30. He married Bertha Jane Leonard on 17 November 1909, in Macon, Bibb, Georgia, United States. He died on 21 September 1953, in Charlotte, Mecklenburg, North Carolina, United ...

  3. Edward CarringtonVirginia. Edward Carrington was a veteran of the American Revolution, an experienced national politician and Virginia’s first U.S. marshal. He began the monumental task of ensuring that his 68 deputies counted Virginia’s 1790-91 population in a timely manner.

  4. Tench Coxe to Edward Carrington, John Kilty, and Thomas Marshall-March 16, 1796 Account of Jacob Wagner-June 2, 1796 A Sketch of the Finances of the United States by Albert Gallatin-November 12, 1796

  5. Jaquelin Ambler 6 Marshall ( Jaquelin 5, John 4, Thomas 3, John 2, Thomas 1) was born 9 Feb 1829 at 'Prospect Hill', Fauquier Co., VA; he married Rebecca Peyton Marshall, daughter of Edward Carrington Marshall and Rebecca Courtenay Peyton, 17 Dec 1856 at Markham, Fauquier Co., VA; he died 2 May 1909 at 'The Crag', Markham, Fauquier Co., VA, at age 80; he was buried at Leeds Church, Hume ...

  6. 5 de oct. de 2011 · The investors elected Edward Carrington Marshall president of the new venture. Marshall was the son of John Marshall, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and America’s most famous jurist. Previously disabled by a fall, Edward Marshall still managed to get around with the aid of a crutch and a cane.

  7. Edward C. Marshall. Edward Colston Marshall (June 29, 1821 – July 9, 1893) was an American politician who served as congressman from California's at-large district from 1851 to 1853, and as California attorney general from 1883 to 1887. He was a member of the Democratic Party.