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Go East, Young Man

$400.00

This memoir chronicles the first 40 years of William O. Douglas’s life, from his humble upbringing in the American West to his appointment to the Supreme Court in 1939. It explores his personal battles with poverty and polio, his education at Whitman College and Columbia Law School, and his rapid rise as a legal scholar and chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) under Franklin D. Roosevelt.

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Go East, Young Man provides an intimate and often provocative look at the formative experiences of one of the longest-serving and most outspoken justices in Supreme Court history. Douglas recounts his early life in Washington State, where his love for the outdoors and the Cascade Mountains developed as a means of physical rehabilitation after childhood polio.
The book details his journey from riding freight trains as a young man to becoming a influential figure in the New Deal era. He offers behind-the-scenes reflections on his interactions with political giants like FDR and legal luminaries like Louis Brandeis. Beyond just a personal history, the autobiography serves as a defense of individual liberties and a critique of corporate and governmental overreach, setting the stage for his long and often controversial judicial career.

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