- Archibald Cox
Infobox US Cabinet official
name=Archibald Cox, Jr.
order=31st
title=United States Solicitor General
term_start=January 1961
term_end=July 1965
president=John F. Kennedy Lyndon B. Johnson
predecessor=J. Lee Rankin
successor=Thurgood Marshall
birth_date=May 17 ,1912
birth_place=Plainfield, New Jersey
death_date=May 29 ,2004 (aged 92)
death_place=Brooksville, Maine
party=DemocratArchibald Cox, Jr., (
May 17 ,1912 [Some sources say he was born 12 May 1912.] –May 29 ,2004 ) was an Americanlawyer who served as U.S. Solicitor General under PresidentJohn F. Kennedy , and later became best known as the firstspecial prosecutor for theWatergate scandal .Early life and law career
Cox was the son of Archibald and Frances Perkins Cox. A native of
Plainfield, New Jersey , he attended theWardlaw-Hartridge School , then called Wardlaw Country Day. Cox graduated fromHarvard College in 1934 andHarvard Law School in 1937 where he was a member ofPhi delta phi legal fraternity, and joined the Boston law firm ofRopes, Gray, Best, Coolidge and Rugg , now known asRopes & Gray . DuringWorld War II , he was appointed to theNational Defense Board , and then to the Office of the Solicitor General.After the war ended, Cox joined the faculty at Harvard, where he taught courses in
tort s and in administrative, constitutional, andlabor law . During that time, he also became an adviser and speech-writer for John F. Kennedy, who was at that time U.S. senator fromMassachusetts . In 1961, Cox joined the new Kennedy administration as solicitor general. At a time when civil rights protesters were routinely chased with dogs and clubbed, he became JFK's point man on pursuing legal remedies to injustice, often appearing before the Supreme Court. Among the cases he was involved in were "Baker v. Carr ", which set the standards for reapportionment; "Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States ", which broke grounds on public accommodations for African-Americans under the Civil Rights Act of 1964; and "South Carolina v. Katzenbach ", which upheld theVoting Rights Act ; In 1965, he returned to the law school.Watergate special prosecutor
On
May 19 ,1973 , Cox took another leave to accept appointment as the first Watergate special prosecutor. Less than two months following his appointment, Cox learned with the rest of America of Nixon's secret tapes. Over the next few months, Cox, the Senate Watergate committee, and Judge John Sirica battled with the White House over those tapes. During the fight, after Sirica ordered Nixon to comply with the committee and Cox's demand, Cox offered the President a compromise. OnOctober 20 ,1973 , in an event termed theSaturday Night Massacre , U.S. PresidentRichard Nixon ordered Cox fired, due to Cox's insistence on obtaining secret White House tapes. Rather than comply with this order, bothAttorney General Elliot Richardson and Deputy Attorney GeneralWilliam Ruckelshaus resigned. The order was ultimately carried out by the Solicitor General,Robert Bork . Upon being fired, Cox stated, "whether ours shall be a government of laws and not of men is now for Congress and ultimately the American people."The firing of Cox illustrated the need for
independent counsel s — prosecutors specifically appointed to investigate official misconduct. After Nixon's resignation, Cox became chairman ofCommon Cause , and became the founding chair of theHealth Effects Institute . Cox argued "Buckley v. Valeo ", which reformed campaign financing, before the Supreme Court in 1976. He was made an honorary member of theOrder of the Coif in 1991. Besides the Paul Douglas Ethics in Government Award, Professor Cox was also the recipient of the Thomas "Tip" O'Neill Citizenship Award.Death and legacy
Cox died at his home in
Brooksville, Maine of natural causes, on the same day asSam Dash , chief counsel to the Senate Select Committee to Investigate Campaign Practices during the Watergate scandal.The "New York Times" wrote, "a gaunt 6-footer who wore three-piece suits, Mr. Cox was often described as 'ramrod straight,' not only because of his bearing but also because of his personality."
Cox was the great-grandson of
William M. Evarts , who defended PresidentAndrew Johnson during his impeachment hearing and became Secretary of State in the Hayes administration. He was also a direct descendant ofRoger Sherman , a Connecticut signer of theDeclaration of Independence ; Archibald Cox, Jr. 6, Frances Bruen Perkins 5, Elizabeth Hoar Evarts 4,William Maxwell Evarts 3, Mehitabel Sherman 2,Roger Sherman 1.Bibliography
A partial list of Cox's books:
*"Freedom of Expression" (2001)ISBN : 0735102368
*"Law and the National Labor Policy" (1983)ISBN : 0313237948
*"The Role of the Supreme Court in American Government" (1977)ISBN : 0198274114
*"The Court and the Constitution" (1988)ISBN : 039548071XNotes
Further reading
*"Cox and Nixon" "Time." October 29, 1973.
*Gormley, Ken. "Archibald Cox: The Conscience of a Nation" New York: Perseus Books, 1999. ISBN 0738201472External links
* [http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/digital/collections/oral_hist/Cox/index.html Archibald Cox Oral History] , audio and transcripts from 2000 interview with Archibald Cox
* [http://www.usdoj.gov/osg/aboutosg/a_Cox_bio.htm Biography] from a Department of Justice website
* [http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000103&sid=aceTxMotBhUM&refer=us Bloomberg News story on Cox and Samuel Dash]
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=8848898 Find-A-Grave profile for Archibald Cox]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.