American Decades
The Schwimmer Case: Citizenship and the Conscientious Objector
A Pacifist Professor.
In August 1921 Prof. Rosika Schwimmer, a native of Hungary, entered the United States to take a faculty position at the University of Chicago. She remained there for five years under resident alien status and applied for American citizenship in September 1926. A committed pacifist who had opposed World War I, the fifty-one-year-old Schwimmer gave a negative answer to question twenty-two on her preliminary application form, declaring herself unwilling to bear arms during any future national emergency. Schwimmer's application was denied by the U.S. Department of State. With Morris L. Ernst as her attorney, Schwimmer filed suit against the federal government, and her case was argued before the U.S. Supreme Court on 12 April 1929.
The Supreme Court Ruling.
One month later the court ruled against Schwimmer. Justice Pierce Butler spoke for the majority, declaring: "The influence of conscientious...
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1920's Law and Justice
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Hall-Mills Murder Case
- Involuntary Sterilization: Eugenics and Public Policy
- Law Enforcement: The Hoover-Donovan Feud
- Law Enforcement: The Legal Basis for the Wiretap
- The Leopold and Loeb Case and the Development of the Insanity Plea
- The Limits of Free Speech
- Race Relations: Death in a Desegregated Neighborhood
- Race Relations: Denying Black Suffrage
- Race Relations: A Legal Definition of Color
- Race Relations: The Rise and Fall of the Ku Klux Klan
- The Sacco and Vanzetti Case
- The Saint Valentine's Day Massacre
- The Schwimmer Case: Citizenship and the Conscientious Objector
- The Scopes "Monkey" Trial and the Separation of Church and State
- A Victory for Academic Freedom
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1920–1929
