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John Paul Stevens Turns 90, Becomes Second Oldest Supreme Court Justice After Oliver Wendell Holmes

MARK SHERMAN   04/19/10 06:01 PM ET   AP

Supreme Court Stevens

WASHINGTON — His tenure on the Supreme Court touched four decades, following service in a war that defined his generation and a childhood in a prominent family. He celebrated his 90th birthday among court colleagues at least a dozen years younger.

Until Tuesday, Oliver Wendell Holmes was the only American who fit that description. Now, John Paul Stevens becomes the second Supreme Court justice to mark his 90th birthday on the court.

Stevens' recent announcement that he will retire this summer, a few months after turning 90, means Holmes will remain the court's oldest justice. He retired two months shy of his 91st birthday in 1932.

Holmes, whose bushy mustache was his most striking physical feature, was born during the short presidency of William Henry Harrison, the ninth president. He died with Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the 32nd president, in the White House. His grandmother remembered fleeing Boston ahead of the advancing British at the start of the Revolutionary War.

Stevens, known for his sporty bow ties, was born near the end of the wartime presidency of Woodrow Wilson, the nation's 28th president. He's leaving to allow his successor to be nominated by Barack Obama, the 44th.

There are similarities between the two justices that extend well beyond their longevity.

Holmes grew up in Boston amid the day's leading intellectuals. Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow were visitors to the family home.

Stevens was born into a family that owned a large hotel in Chicago that attracted celebrities as guests. As a child, he made the acquaintance of Amelia Earhart and Charles Lindbergh.

Both men were decorated war veterans: Stevens spent World War II in naval intelligence, while Holmes was wounded three times in the Civil War.

Their appointments to the court had little to do with their political ideology, said G. Edward White, a University of Virginia law professor and Holmes biographer. "Both Holmes and Stevens are not identified in any easy way with national politics," White said.

One significant difference White pointed out is that Stevens has used his seniority on the court to great effect, leading the court's liberals by attracting votes from more conservative justices on key issues over the past 15 years.

"Holmes was quite detached from the politics of the court," White said. "I've never found any evidence that Holmes used position as senior associate justice, which he was for quite a while, in a strategic fashion."

Another difference between them, perhaps, is the manner of their retirements.

Stevens, who is among the longest-serving as well as oldest justices, has not said anything in public to explain the timing of his departure after more than 34 years as a justice.

Yet in stepping down before breaking Holmes' record or eclipsing William O. Douglas' 36 years as a justice, Stevens is in a sense ensuring that he will be remembered more for what he did on the court than how long he stayed.

"Otherwise, it detracts from what you want people to think about, your jurisprudence," said Artemus Ward of Northern Illinois University, author of a book on Supreme Court retirements.

It's not always the case that justices relinquish the power and perks that come with the lifetime appointment.

Douglas, whom Stevens replaced, had a hard time letting go. After suffering a debilitating stroke, he remained on the court until his colleagues not-so-subtly suggested he had to quit. Even after Stevens was confirmed as his successor, Douglas sought to have opinions issued in his name.

"Stevens has the personal recollection of people not departing when they should," Ward said.

Unlike Stevens, who appears to be leaving on his own terms, Holmes also was essentially asked to retire by the other justices.

Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes paid a visit to Holmes at his home in Washington in January 1932 after it had become clear that Holmes was having trouble on the job. Hughes later reported that Holmes put up no opposition and agreed to retire immediately.

Just 10 months earlier, the nation made a fuss of Holmes' 90th, unsurprising because fewer people lived so long 80 years ago. The American Bar Association gave him a gold medal, and the country's leading legal lights organized a nationwide radio broadcast in his honor. At the program's end, Holmes himself said a few words, the first he ever uttered into a microphone.

"Death plucks my ear and says, 'Live – I am coming,'" he concluded, quoting the ancient Roman poet Virgil to explain why he continued to work into his 90s.

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WASHINGTON — His tenure on the Supreme Court touched four decades, following service in a war that defined his generation and a childhood in a prominent family. He celebrated his 90th birthday a...
WASHINGTON — His tenure on the Supreme Court touched four decades, following service in a war that defined his generation and a childhood in a prominent family. He celebrated his 90th birthday a...
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07:57 AM on 04/20/2010
Yeah, I'm sure this guy is in touch with reality.... and has all his "wits" about him. Dear god why are people like this making decisions about and for our society?
07:28 AM on 04/20/2010
That's what his family said on his last birthday - highest birthday yet !
02:43 AM on 04/20/2010
This must be a pretty cushy job. Who the hell works til their early nineties, assuming they may even live that long??!
10:20 PM on 04/19/2010
What's there to be proud of when someone is on the Supreme court at 90? There's nothing to prove. Strom Thurmond should go down in history on what not to do when old age approaches and you still want to stay in DC! Jesse Helms too.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LemonMeringue
Happy Birthday, Steve Jobs - Feb. 24th
12:45 AM on 04/20/2010
What he should be proud of is the fine way he served on the Court, for 35 years. He is irreplaceable.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
06:18 PM on 04/19/2010
Happy Birthday Justice Stevens and thank you for your dedicated service and sane acts through your tenure. You will be sorely missed.
Now let's find someone liberal enough to make all the Republican Cults of Jesus Inc heads explode....
04:59 PM on 04/19/2010
The lists I've seen have this liberal being replaced by a moderate. Funny since it's a Republican being replaced by a Democrat.
04:43 PM on 04/19/2010
happy birthday justice stephens

thank you for your service
04:19 PM on 04/19/2010
Please stay, Justice Stevens.
04:01 PM on 04/19/2010
Happy Birthday to you. I hope I will be 1/100 as sharp as you when I am 90.

Happy retirement and you will be missed.
06:20 PM on 04/19/2010
Wish you would have done it 10 years ago
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GeneralDisarray
Fox News Viewers Know Less Than People ...
09:55 PM on 04/19/2010
Idopaytaxes
Member Since April 2010
03:50 PM on 04/19/2010
John Paul Stevens, Liberal, Republican Appointee
Sandra Day O’Connor, Moderate, Republican Appointee
David Souter, Liberal, Republican Appointee
Anthony Kennedy, Moderate, Republican Appointee
My point being that ALL Democrat appointees are left-wing activists, whereas Republican appointees are more diverse.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jjgg5
04:54 PM on 04/19/2010
I think the style of your argument is influenced by "Faux News". Please explain Anthony Scalia, Clarence Thomas and John Roberts.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ObamAtomic
12:52 AM on 04/20/2010
While you there add Alito.
03:39 PM on 04/19/2010
His shoes can never be filled. But at least replace him with a liberal, President Obama.
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newtom
eschew obfuscation
03:22 PM on 04/19/2010
Happy birthday, Justice Stephens. Write us a book when you retire.
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newtom
eschew obfuscation
03:25 PM on 04/19/2010
How embarrassing... Justice Stephens
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newtom
eschew obfuscation
03:26 PM on 04/19/2010
How embarrassing. Justice Stevens.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jjgg5
03:22 PM on 04/19/2010
I hope Justice Stevens influences President Obama about his nominated replacement on the Court.