Stanley Forman Reed

E77354

Stanley Forman Reed was an Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, serving from 1938 to 1957 and known for his influential opinions during the New Deal and early civil rights era.


Statements (47)
Predicate Object
instanceOf Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
human
appointedBy Franklin D. Roosevelt
areaOfActivity New Deal jurisprudence
constitutional law
barAdmission Kentucky bar
child Stanley Forman Reed Jr.
conflict World War I
countryOfCitizenship United States of America
dateOfBirth 1884-12-31
dateOfDeath 1980-04-02
educatedAt Columbia Law School
University of Paris NERFINISHED
University of Virginia School of Law
Yale University
employer United States federal government NERFINISHED
endTime 1957-02-25
familyName Reed
givenName Stanley
honorificPrefix Justice
knownFor role in early civil rights jurisprudence
support for New Deal legislation
memberOf Supreme Court of the United States
middleName Forman
militaryBranch United States Army
nativeLanguage English
nominatedAsJusticeOfTheSupremeCourtBy Franklin D. Roosevelt
notableWork majority opinion in Smith v. Allwright (1944)
participation in early civil rights decisions leading up to Brown v. Board of Education
occupation judge
lawyer
politician
partyAffiliation Democratic Party (United States)
placeOfBirth Minerva, Kentucky, United States
placeOfBurial Maysville Cemetery, Maysville, Kentucky, United States
placeOfDeath Huntington, New York, United States
positionHeld Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
Solicitor General of the United States
religion Presbyterianism
replaced George Sutherland
replacedBy Charles Evans Whittaker NERFINISHED
residence Maysville, Kentucky, United States
sexOrGender male
spouse Winifred Elgin Reed
startTime 1938-01-31
workLocation Washington, D.C., United States
workPeriod 20th century

Referenced by (6)
Subject (surface form when different) Predicate
Betts v. Brady ("Stanley F. Reed")
Palko v. Connecticut ("Stanley F. Reed")
majorityJustices
Smith v. Allwright
United Public Workers v. Mitchell ("Stanley F. Reed")
majorityOpinionBy
Stanley Forman Reed ("Stanley Forman Reed Jr.")
child
Shelley v. Kraemer ("Stanley F. Reed")
joinedBy

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