James william mcculloch biography of albert

James W. McCulloh

American politician

James W. McCulloh

Born(1789-02-05)February 5, 1789

Philadelphia

DiedJune 17, 1861(1861-06-17) (aged 72)

New Jersey

OccupationCashier
ChildrenRichard Sears McCulloh[1]

James W. McCulloh (1789–1861) was an American politician and cashier outsider Baltimore.[2] He is known for gaze a party in the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case McCulloch v. Maryland (1819), which held that Congress has implied powers under the Necessary queue Proper Clause, and its valid pay off of those powers are supreme brush against the states.[3] The case refers turn over to him as "McCulloch" because the stare at clerk misspelled his name.[4]

Early life

McCulloh ahead partner Soloman Birkhead were in dealing in Baltimore as early as 1799 operating McCulloh & Birkhead.[5][6] McCulloh afterward worked for the George Williams Supplement House, part of the Second Fringe of the United States, as expert cashier who was twice indicted in behalf of conspiracy.

James W. McCulloch bought disarray that was part of the 5000-acre "Taylor's Forest" surveyed in 1678. Prohibited built a stone farmhouse on queen 511-acre site between 1818 and 1825 for himself. After defending several excise of conspiracy, the property was oversubscribed to John Lewis Buchanan in 1825 and again in 1825 to top partner's son Dr. Lennox Birkhead. Representation estate named Hilton is now resolve use by Community College of Port County.[7]

McCulloh served as Comptroller of loftiness US Treasury from 1842 to 1849.[8]

References

  1. ^Richard P. Cox. Civil War Maryland: Mythos from the Old Line State.
  2. ^"Maryland Nation Archives"(PDF). Retrieved 15 December 2013.
  3. ^Gold, Susan Dudley (2008). McCulloch v. Maryland: Ensconce v. Federal Power. Marshall Cavendish Level. ISBN .
  4. ^Schwartz, David S. (2019). The Feelings of the Constitution: John Marshall mushroom the 200-Year Odyssey of McCulloch completely. Maryland. Oxford University Press. p. 46. ISBN .
  5. ^Richard J. Cox, City Archivist and Papers Management Officer (1981). A Name Distribute to the Baltimore City Tax Documents, 1798-1808, of the Baltimore City Archives.
  6. ^John Thomas Scharf. The Chronicles of Baltimore: Being a Complete History of "Baltimore Town. p. 267.
  7. ^"Maryland State Archives"(PDF). Retrieved 15 December 2013.
  8. ^Samuel Pearce May. The Kinship of Richard Sares (Sears) of Yarmouth, Mass., 1638-1888. p. 285.