Appendix VII
COMPOSITION OF THE SUPERIOR COURT OF JUDICATURE, 1745–1775
This accompanying table tracks the “core” of the Superior Court of Judicature from 1745–1775, focusing on Cushing, Hutchinson, Lynde, Oliver, Russell, and Trowbridge. The continuity is all the more striking when one thinks of Benjamin Lynde Jr. replacing his father, Benjamin Lynde Sr., on the Court in 1745, and of John Cushing (1695–1778), appointed in 1748, following his father John Cushing (1662–1737), also a Justice of the Court. John Cushing, the son, resigned in 1771, only to be replaced by his son, William Cushing (1732–1810), in 1772. William Cushing then went on to become a Justice of the new Supreme Court of the United States. My gratitude to my excellent research assistants, who labored on this chart, and special acknowledgment to William T. Davis, History of the Judiciary of Massachusetts (Boston, 1900). Biographies of some of the Justices are also to be found in L. Kinvin Wroth and Hiller B. Zobel’s masterful “The Massachusetts Bench and Bar: A Biographical Register of John Adams’ Contemporaries,” Legal Papers of John Adams (L. Kinvin Wroth, Hiller B. Zobel, eds., Cambridge, Mass., 1967), vol. 1, xcv–cxiv.
Composition of the Superior Court of Judicature, 1745–1775
Focusing on Justices Cushing, Hutchinson, Lynde, Oliver, Russell and Trowbridge, this short composite tracks the composition of the Superior Court of Judicature from the earliest appointment of the focus group, Lynde, in 1745 to the latest exist of the focus group, Oliver and Trowbridge in 1775.
Source: Davis, William T., History of the Judiciary of Massachusetts, Boston Book Co., 1900.
[Appointment to the Court in BOLD; Exit from the court italicized and underlined]
- Composition #1 (1745): Benjamin Lynde Jr. appointed Associate Justice; leaving Chief Justice Paul Dudly; Associate Justices Lynde, Richard Saltonstall, Setphen Sewall, and Nathaniel Hubbard. Benjamin Lynde Jr.’s father, Benjamin Lynde Sr., resigns as Chief Justice.
- Composition #2 (1747): John Cushing replaces Nathaniel Hubbard; leaving Chief Justice Dudley; Associate Justices Lynde, Cushing, Saltonstall and Sewall.
- Composition #3 (1752): Chambers Russell replaces Paul Dudley; Sewall appointed Chief Justice; leaving Chief Justice Sewall; Associate Justices Lynde, Cushing, Russell and Saltonstall.
- Composition #4 (1756): Peter Oliver replaces Richard Saltonstall; leaving Chief Justice Sewall; Associate Justices Lynde, Cushing, Russell and Oliver.
- Composition #5 (1761): Thomas Hutchinson replaces Stephen Sewall (as Chief Justice); leaving Chief Justice Hutchinson; Associate Justices Lynde, Cushing, Russell and Oliver.
- Composition #6 (1767): Edmund Trowbridge replaces Chambers Russell; leaving Chief Justice Hutchinson; Associate Justice Lynde, Cushing, Oliver and Trowbridge. See remarks by Chief Justice on Russell, March 1767, Quincy’s Reports, 233–234.
- Composition #7 (1769): Thomas Hutchinson resigns; Lynde appointed Chief Justice; leaving Chief Justice Lynde; Associate Justices Cushing, Oliver and Trowbridge.
- Composition #8 (1771): Lynde and Cushing resign; Foster Hutchinson (brother of Thomas) appointed Associate Justice; leaving Associate Justices Oliver, Trowbridge and Hutchinson.
- Composition #9 (1772): Oliver appointed Chief Justice; Nathaniel Ropes and William Cushing (son of John) appointed Associate Justices; leaving Chief Justice Oliver; Associate Justices Trowbridge, Hutchinson, Ropes and Cushing.
- Composition #10 (1774): William Browne replaces Nathaniel Ropes; leaving Chief Justice Oliver; Associate Justices Trowbridge, Hutchinson, Cushing and Browne.
- Composition #11 (1775): Oliver and Trowbridge resign.
- Benjamin Lynde Jr. (1700–1781)
(Biography included in Davis, William T., History of the Judiciary of Massachusetts, Boston Book Co., 1900, 91–2).
Born in Salem, Massachusetts. Harvard: 1718. Son of Chief Justice Benjamin Lynde. Appointed Judge of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas for Suffolk County in 1734, and then Essex Inferior Court of Common Pleas, 1739. Appointed Associate Justice of the Superior Court in 1746, and Chief Justice in 1769. Was presiding judge in the 1770 Boston Massacre trial. Resigned his seat as Chief Justice in 1771, and was appointed Judge of Probate for Essex County, which he held until his death in 1781. See the excellent article by Sally E. Hadden, “Benjamin Lynde, Jr., Servant of the Commonwealth,” 9 Massachusetts Legal History (2003), 1.
- John Cushing (1695–1778)
(Biography included in Davis, William T., History of the Judiciary of Massachusetts, Boston Book Co., 1900, 97).
Born in Scituate, Massachusetts. Son of Judge John Cushing. From 1746 to 1763, he was a member of the Council, and from 1738 to 1746, Judge of Probate for Plymouth County. From 1738 to 1747, he was Judge of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas for Plymouth County. Appointed Associate Justice of the Superior Court in 1747, he resigned his seat on the Superior bench in 1771.
- Chambers Russell (1713–1766)
(Biography included in Davis, William T., History of the Judiciary of Massachusetts, Boston Book Co., 1900, 97).
Born in Charlestown, Massachusetts. Harvard: 1731. From 1747 to 1752, he was Judge of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas for Middlesex County and a member of the Countil in 1759 and 1760. In 1747, he was appointed Judge of Vice-Admiralty over New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Appointed Associate Justice of the Superior Court in 1752, he remained on the Superior bench until his death in 1766.
- Peter Oliver (1713–1791)
(Biography included in Davis, William T., History of the Judiciary of Massachusetts, Boston Book Co., 1900, 92).
Born in Boston, Massachusetts. Harvard: 1730. In 1747, appointed Judge of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas for Plymouth County, and held that position until 1756, when he was appointed Associate Justice of the Superior Court of Judicature. In 1772, succeeded Lynde as Chief Justice. In 1774, a charter modification made Judges salaries payable by the Corwn; Oliver was the only judge not to refuse his salary from the Crown. Left the bench in 1775 and went to England, where he received the degree of LL.D. from the University of Oxford.
- Thomas Hutchinson (1711–1780)
(Biography included in Davis, William T., History of the Judiciary of Massachusetts, Boston Book Co., 1900, 85–86). See also Bernard Bailyn’s classic The Ordeal of Thomas Hutchinson (Cambridge, Mass., 1974).
Born in Boston, Massachusetts. Harvard: 1727. Judge, Suffolk Probate Court, 1752. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Judicature from 1761–1769. Governor of Massachusetts from 1771–1774. Left for England permanently, 1774, and died in exile.
- Edmund Trowbridge* (1709–1793)
(Biography included in Davis, William T., History of the Judiciary of Massachusetts, Boston Book Co., 1900, 97).
Born in Newton, Massachusetts. Harvard: 1727. Served as member of the council in 1764 and 1765. Appointed Attorney General in 1749, which he served until his appointment in 1767 as Associate Justice of the Superior Court, which he served until his resignation in 1775.