Event Information
Lawshe Memorial Museum
130 3rd Ave NSouth St. Paul, MN 55075
About
In this session we will discuss what the Constitutions says about what the Supreme Court is supposed to do. How it has evolved over time. Then we will discuss famous cases and incidents of several of the Courts beginning in 1801 with The Marshall Court through the Burger Court in the 1970’s including cases from The Taney Court, The Fuller/Harlan Court, The Hughes Court vs. F.D. Roosevelt, The Warren Court and conclude with The Burger Court.
As part of the upcoming Semiquincentennial (250th) anniversary of the Signing of the Declaration of Independence, we are offering a 14-part presentation series that can be taken as a whole, or individual sections. Each program is designed to explore a different aspect of our government to show why, and how, it was set up that way and its impact on today. This series is presented by educator and historian, Frank Sachs.
Frank Sachs is a retired twin cities educator of 46 years. The final thirty-seven of those years were at The Blake School in Minneapolis where he is currently serves as Faculty Emeritus. While teaching at Blake Frank had the good fortune to study the Constitution and the American legal system at the Supreme Court Institute for Teachers at Georgetown Law School, and to be selected twice to be a Gilder Lehrman Scholar. First to study George Washington at Mt. Vernon, Virginia with author and George Washington University professor Denver Brunsman, and six additional Founding Fathers (Hamilton, Madison, Franklin, Marshall, Adams and Jefferson) at New York University with Richard Brookhiser, a bestselling author and editor of the National Review
During his teaching career Frank received several awards including being named as a recipient of the Presidential Scholars - Teacher Recognition Award, by the U.S. Department of Education in 2007, being named a Kentucky Colonel in 2009, and receiving a Citation of Merit for Outstanding Achievement and a Meritorious Career from his alma mater, The University of Missouri-Columbia in 2010.
Tickets can be purchased at https://dakotahistory.org/events/1055-apr-16-america-s-250th-supreme-court-from-1789-1986-marshall-taney-warren-and-burger. Package deals on multiple lectures in the series are also available for a limited time!
Dates
- Thursday, April 16, 20266 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Rates
- Admission: FREE