American Decades
Meyer v. Nebraska
Supreme Court decision
By: James Clark McReynolds
Date: June 4, 1923
Source: Meyer v. Nebraska. 262 U.S. 390 (1923).
About the Author: Justice James Clark McReynolds (1862–1946) was born in Elkton, Kentucky. He studied law at the University of Virginia, earning a degree in 1884, and served as a professor of law at Vanderbilt University. In 1903 President Theodore Roosevelt (served 1901–1909) appointed McReynolds Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division in the Department of Justice. He later became Attorney General, and was appointed by President Woodrow Wilson (served 1913–1921) to the Supreme Court in 1914. He served as a Supreme Court justice for twenty-six years until his retirement in 1941.
Introduction
In 1920, a Nebraska private school teacher was convicted of teaching a ten-year-old child a Bible story in the German language. This...
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1920's Education Primary Sources
- "Memoranda Accompanying the Vetoes of the Lusk Laws"
- Education on the Dalton Plan
- "Educational Determinism; Or Democracy and the I.Q."
- Meyer v. Nebraska
- "Children of Loneliness"
- "A Statement of the Principles of Progressive Education"
- Scopes v. Tennessee
- "The Teacher Goes Job-Hunting"
- Gong Lum v. Rice
- "Progressive Education and the Science of Education"
- School and Society in Chicago
- "Some 'Defects and Excesses of Present-Day Athletic Contests,' 1929"
- The Heart Is the Teacher
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
