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{{Short description|US Supreme Court justice and pro football player (1917–2002)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2011}}
{{About|the Supreme Court Justice|the sailor|Byron White (sailor)}}
{{About|the Supreme Court Justice and former football player|the sailor|Byron White (sailor)}}
{{Use American English|date=March 2022}}
{{Infobox judge
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2023}}
|name = Byron Raymond White
{{Infobox officeholder
|image = Justice White Official.jpg
| name = Byron White
|imagesize =
| image = Justice White Official.jpg
|caption =
|office = [[Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States|Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court]]
| office = [[Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States]]
| nominator = [[John F. Kennedy]]
|termstart = April 16, 1962<ref name=USSCTimeline>{{Cite web| title=Members of the Supreme Court of the United States | publisher=[[Supreme Court of the United States]] | url=http://www.supremecourt.gov/about/members.aspx| accessdate =April 26, 2010}}</ref>
| term_start = April 16, 1962<!--Term start date as per www.supremecourt.gov, reflects date oath taken-->
|termend = June 28, 1993
|nominator = [[John F. Kennedy]]
| term_end = June 28, 1993
| predecessor = [[Charles Evans Whittaker]]
|appointer =
|predecessor = [[Charles Evans Whittaker]]
| successor = [[Ruth Bader Ginsburg]]
| office1 = 6th [[United States Deputy Attorney General]]
|successor = [[Ruth Bader Ginsburg]]
|title2 = 4th [[United States Deputy Attorney General]]
| president1 = [[John F. Kennedy]]
|term_start2 = 1961
| term_start1 = January 20, 1961
|term_end2 = 1962
| term_end1 = April 12, 1962
|president2 = [[John F. Kennedy]]
| predecessor1 = [[Lawrence Walsh]]
| successor1 = [[Nicholas Katzenbach]]
|predecessor2 = [[Lawrence E. Walsh]]
| birth_name = Byron Raymond White
|successor2 = [[Nicholas Katzenbach]]
| birth_date = {{birth date|1917|6|8}}
|alma_mater = [[University of Colorado at Boulder|University of Colorado]] <br/> [[Hertford College, Oxford]] <br/> [[Yale Law School]]
| birth_place = [[Fort Collins, Colorado]], U.S.
|birth_date = {{Birth date|1917|6|8}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|2002|4|15|1917|6|8}}
|birth_place = [[Fort Collins, Colorado|Fort Collins]], Colorado, United States
| death_place = [[Denver|Denver, Colorado]], U.S.
|death_date = {{Death date and age|2002|4|15|1917|6|8}}
| resting_place = [[Cathedral of St. John in the Wilderness|Saint John's Cathedral]]
|death_place = [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]], Colorado, United States
| party = [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]
|spouse =
| spouse = {{marriage|Marion Stearns|1946}}
|religion = [[Episcopal Church (United States)|Episcopalian]]
| signature = Byron R. White signature.svg
| education = [[University of Colorado Boulder]] ([[Bachelor of Arts|BA]]) <br> [[Hertford College, Oxford]] <br> [[Yale Law School|Yale University]] ([[Bachelor of Laws|LLB]])
| branch = {{flag|United States Navy}}
| rank = [[File:US-O4 insignia.svg|15px]] [[Lieutenant commander (United States)|Lieutenant Commander]]
| battles = {{tree list}}
* [[World War II]]
** [[Asiatic-Pacific Theater|Pacific Theater]]
{{tree list/end}}
| serviceyears = 1942–1945
| unit = [[File:Final ONI seal.png|23px]] [[Office of Naval Intelligence]]
| mawards = [[File:Bronze Star Medal ribbon.svg|25px]] [[Bronze Star Medal|Bronze Star]] (with [[File:Bronze oak leaf-3d.svg|12px]] [[Oak leaf cluster|Bronze Oak Leaf Cluster]])
| awards = [[File:Presidential Medal of Freedom (ribbon).svg|23px]] [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]] (2003)
| relatives = [[Clayton Sam White]] (brother)
| module = {{Infobox NFL biography
| embed = yes
| name = Whizzer White
| image =
| image_size =
| alt =
| caption =
| number = 24, 44
| position = [[Halfback (American football)|Halfback]]
| height_ft = 6
| height_in = 1
| weight_lb = 187
| high_school = [[Wellington High School (Wellington, Colorado)|Wellington]] ([[Wellington, Colorado|Colorado]])
| college = [[Colorado Buffaloes football|Colorado]] (1935–1937)
| draftyear = 1938
| draftround = 1
| draftpick = 4
| pastteams = * [[Pittsburgh Pirates (NFL)|Pittsburgh Pirates]] ({{NFL Year|1938}})
* [[Detroit Lions]] ({{NFL Year|1940|1941}})
| highlights = * 2× First-team [[All-Pro]] ([[1938 All-Pro Team|1938]], [[1940 All-Pro Team|1940]])
* 2× [[List of National Football League annual rushing yards leaders|NFL rushing yards leader]] (1938, 1940)
* [[List of National Football League annual punting yards leaders|NFL punting yards leader]] (1941)
* [[National Football League 1940s All-Decade Team|NFL 1940s All-Decade Team]]
* Consensus [[College Football All-America Team|All-American]] ([[1937 College Football All-America Team|1937]])
* [[Colorado Buffaloes football#Retired numbers|Colorado Buffaloes No. 24]] retired
| statlabel1 = Rushing yards
| statvalue1 = 1,321
| statlabel2 = Rushing average
| statvalue2 = 3.4
| statlabel3 = Rushing [[touchdown]]s
| statvalue3 = 11
| statlabel4 = [[Reception (gridiron football)|Receptions]]
| statvalue4 = 16
| statlabel5 = Receiving yards
| statvalue5 = 301
| statlabel6 = Receiving touchdowns
| statvalue6 = 1
| pfr = WhitWh00
| CollegeHOF = 1549
| module = {{Listen|pos=center|embed=yes|filename=Byron White delivers the opinion of the Court in Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Company.ogg|title=Byron White's voice|type=speech|description=Byron White delivers the opinion of the Court in ''[[Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Company]]''<br />Recorded June 28, 1977}}
}}
| allegiance = {{flag|United States}}
}}
}}
'''Byron Raymond "Whizzer" White''' (June 8, 1917 – April 15, 2002) won fame both as a [[American football|football]] [[Halfback (American football)|halfback]] and as an associate justice of the [[Supreme Court of the United States]]. Appointed to the court by President [[John F. Kennedy]] in 1962, he served until his retirement in 1993. He was married to Marion Lloyd Stearns in 1946 and the father of two children, Charles (Barney) Byron White and [[Nancy White (field hockey)|Nancy Pitkin White]].


'''Byron Raymond''' "'''Whizzer'''" '''White''' (June 8, 1917 – April 15, 2002) was an American lawyer, jurist, and professional [[American football|football]] player who served as an [[Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court|associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States]] from 1962 until 1993. By his retirement, he was the Supreme Court's only sitting [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democrat]] and the last-living member of the progressive [[Warren Court]].
White was born in [[Fort Collins]], [[Colorado]]. He was raised in the nearby town of [[Wellington, Colorado]], where he obtained his high school diploma in 1930. He made a point of returning to Wellington on an annual basis for his high school reunions up until 1999 when his physical health worsened significantly. He died in [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]] at the age of 84 from complications of [[pneumonia]]. He was the first and only Supreme Court Justice from the state of Colorado.<ref name="usa today">{{Cite book
| title = Ex-Supreme Court Justice Byron White dies
| author=Joan Biskupic
|work=[[USA Today]]
| date = April 15, 2002
| url = http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2002/04/15/white-obit.htm
| accessdate =October 20, 2008
| authorlink = Joan Biskupic }}</ref>


<!-- WORK IN PROGRESS -->Born and raised in a small homestead in [[Wellington, Colorado]], White distinguished himself as a [[student athlete]] who came from a background of poor farmhands to become a consensus [[College Football All-America Team|All-American]] [[Halfback (American football)|halfback]] for the [[Colorado Buffaloes football|Colorado Buffaloes]]. After being the runner-up for the [[Heisman Trophy]] in 1937, he was selected in the [[1938 NFL draft]] by the [[Pittsburgh Pirates (NFL)|Pittsburgh Pirates]] for the [[National Football League]] (NFL). He led the league in rushing yards during his rookie season. White graduated from the [[University of Colorado Boulder]] as class valedictorian, attaining a [[Rhodes Scholarship]] to study at [[Oxford University]]. After [[World War II]] forced him to return to the United States, he matriculated at [[Yale Law School]], played for the [[Detroit Lions]] in the 1940 and 1941 seasons while still enrolled, and served as an officer for the [[United States Navy]] in the [[Asiatic-Pacific Theater|Pacific Theatre]].
==Education==
After graduating at the top of his Wellington high school class, White attended the [[University of Colorado at Boulder]] on a scholarship.<ref name="usa today"/> He joined the [[Phi Gamma Delta]] fraternity<ref>https://www.phigam.org/NetCommunity/SSLPage.aspx?pid=888</ref> and served as student body president his senior year.<ref name="usa today"/> Graduating in 1938, he won a [[Rhodes Scholarship]] to the University of Oxford and, after having deferred it for a year to play football, he went on to attend [[Hertford College, Oxford]].<ref name="supreme court">{{Cite book
| title = The United States Supreme Court
| author=Christopher L. Tomlins
| publisher=[[Houghton Mifflin]]
| year = 2005
| url = http://books.google.com/books?id=Fy8DjOIxDm0C
| accessdate =October 21, 2008 }}</ref>


<!-- WORK IN PROGRESS -->White graduated from law school with honors in 1946 and [[Law clerk|clerked]] for Chief Justice [[Fred M. Vinson]]. He eschewed work for a [[white-shoe firm]] and returned to Colorado in order to enter private practice in [[Denver]] as a transactional attorney. Minor work as the Colorado state chair of [[John F. Kennedy 1960 presidential campaign|John F. Kennedy's 1960 presidential campaign]] led to him being unexpectedly tapped in 1961 for a position as [[United States Deputy Attorney General|U.S. Deputy Attorney General]]. He was successfully nominated by Kennedy to the Supreme Court the next year, becoming the Court's first justice from Colorado.
==Football==
{{Infobox NFL player
|image=
|caption=
|position=[[Halfback (American football)|Halfback]]
|number=24
| birth_date ={{Birth date|1917|6|8}}
| death_date ={{Death date and age|2002|4|15|1917|6|8}}
|heightft=6
|heightin=1
|weight=187
|debutyear=1938
|debutteam=Pittsburgh Steelers
|finalyear=1941
|finalteam=Detroit Lions
|draftyear=1938
|draftround=1
|draftpick=4
|college=[[University of Colorado at Boulder|Colorado]]
|teams=<nowiki></nowiki>
*[[Pittsburgh Steelers|Pittsburgh Pirates]] ([[1938 NFL season|1938]])
*[[Detroit Lions]] ([[1940 NFL season|1940]]–[[1941 NFL season|1941]])
|stat1label=Rushing Yards
|stat1value=1,321
|stat2label=Average
|stat2value=3.4
|stat3label=Rushing [[Touchdowns|TD]]s
|stat3value=11
|nfl=WHI111984
|highlights=<nowiki></nowiki>
* 3× [[All-Pro]] selection (1938, 1940, 1941)
*[[NFL 1940s All-Decade Team]]
|CollegeHOF=30097
}}
White was an All-American [[American football|football]] [[halfback (American football)|halfback]]<ref name="usa today"/> for the [[Colorado Buffaloes]] of the University of Colorado at Boulder, where he acquired the nickname "Whizzer"<ref name="supreme conflict">{{Cite book
| title = Supreme Conflict: The Inside Story of the Struggle for Control of the United States Supreme Court
| author=Jan Crawford Greenburg
| publisher=Penguin Group
| year = 2007
| url = http://books.google.com/books?id=SQxqXLSy9wcC&pg=PA290&lpg=PA290&dq=alito+handsome&source=bl&ots=tc-uLNG1_3&sig=dt0LENnnzX_lWGDDDWb5baJjzkM&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=3&ct=result
| accessdate =October 20, 2008 }}</ref> from a newspaper columnist. The nickname would follow him throughout his later legal and Supreme Court career, to White's chagrin.<ref name="usa today"/> He also played basketball and baseball. After graduation he signed with the [[National Football League|NFL]]'s [[Pittsburgh Steelers|Pittsburgh Pirates]] (now Steelers),<ref name="usa today"/> playing there during the [[1938 Pittsburgh Pirates (NFL) season|1938 season]]. He led the league in rushing in his rookie season and became the game's highest-paid player.<ref name="usa today"/>


<!-- WORK IN PROGRESS -->White espoused a pragmatic and non-doctrinaire judicial approach which strengthened the powers of the federal government, advocated for the [[School integration in the United States|desegregation of public schools]], and upheld the use of [[affirmative action]]. Though expected to be a reliably liberal justice, he was by contrast a vociferous opponent of [[substantive due process]], penning dissents in both ''[[Miranda v. Arizona]]'' and ''[[Roe v. Wade]]''. White wrote the majority opinion in ''[[Bowers v. Hardwick]]'' (upholding the ability for states to restrict [[Sodomy|homosexual conduct]]) and dissented in ''[[Runyon v. McCrary]]'' (against the ability for the government to restrict [[racial discrimination]] in private schools) and ''[[Planned Parenthood v. Casey]]''. Due to his unwillingness to align with either the liberal or conservative blocs, White was largely oriented with the [[Ideological leanings of United States Supreme Court justices|Court's center]].{{Sfn|Friedman|Israel|2013|p=100–101}}
{| class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#b0c4de; width:20em;" cellspacing="5"
| style="text-align: left;" |Of all the athletes I have known in my lifetime, I'd have to say Whizzer White came as close to anyone to giving 100 percent of himself when he was in competition.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Tagliabue|first=Paul|year=2003|title=A Tribute to Byron White|journal=[[Yale Law Journal]]|publisher=[[Yale University]]|volume=112|url=http://www.questia.com/googleScholar.qst;jsessionid=LJHd2V1286LRkBzwPPf8FpCdCB666T2Z0gDNh28Gr8Ys9Fc2GYph!-1659539997!-1970812899?docId=5001918990}}</ref>
|-
| style="text-align: right;" | ~- Pittsburgh Pirates/Steelers owner '''[[Art Rooney]]'''
|}
After Oxford, White played for the [[Detroit Lions]] from 1940 to 1941. In three NFL seasons, he played in 33 games. He led the league in [[Rush (American football)|rushing yards]] in 1938 and 1940, and he was one of the first "big money" NFL players, making $15,000 a year.<ref name="usa today"/>
His career was cut short when he entered the [[United States Navy]] during World War II; after the war, he elected to attend [[law school]] rather than return to football. He was elected to the [[College Football Hall of Fame]] in 1954.<ref name="hutchinson" />


==Early life and education==
==Military service==
White was born in [[Fort Collins, Colorado]], on June 8, 1917. His father, A. Albert White, managed a local lumber company. His mother, Maude Elizabeth (Burger), was the daughter of German immigrants. He had one older brother, [[Clayton Sam White|Clayton "Sam" Samuel White]]. Neither parent graduated high school, which was not unusual for farming communities at the time, but they instilled in their sons a heavy emphasis on education and took active roles in the local community.{{Sfn|Irish|2003|p=883–884}}{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=22–23}} White and his brother were raised in the nearby town of [[Wellington, Colorado|Wellington]] where they attended the [[Wellington High School (Wellington, Colorado)|local high school]]. As a young student, White worked odd jobs to support his family during the town's decline in the 1920s; these included roles in harvesting [[Beetroot|beets]], shoveling coal, and hard construction work among other forms of manual labor. In his junior year, he and his brother rented out land and spent long hours in the fields, during which time White adopted a nearly lifelong habit of [[smoking]].{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=18}}
During World War II, White served as an intelligence officer in the [[United States Navy]] stationed in the [[Pacific Theater of Operations|Pacific Theatre]]. He had originally wanted to join the [[United States Marines|Marines]] but was kept out due to being [[colorblind]].<ref name="usa today"/> He wrote the intelligence report on the sinking of future President [[John F. Kennedy]]'s ''[[Motor Torpedo Boat PT-109|PT-109]]''.<ref name="hutchinson" /> White was awarded two [[Bronze Star Medal|Bronze Star]] medals.<ref name="usa today"/>


Sam, four years White's senior, became an accomplished student and athlete that graduated as [[valedictorian]], earning a scholarship to study at the [[University of Colorado Boulder|University of Colorado]], where he was later elected by the university to become a [[Rhodes Scholarship|Rhodes Scholar]].{{Sfn|Irish|2003|p=884}} Whereas Sam was a gregarious and socially active child, White was described as a taciturn boy who "was very quiet, measuring every single word, showing no emotion, and revealing nothing."{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=21}}
==Personal life==
White married Marion Stearns, the daughter of the president of the University of Colorado, and they would eventually have one son, Charles, and one daughter, Nancy.<ref name="usa today"/>


White excelled academically in high school, graduating in 1934 as the class valedictorian with the highest grades in the school's history. He studied diligently in order to attain a scholarship to attend college, later describing his philosophy in Wellington as "do your work and don't be late for dinner."{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=24}} White followed his brother's footsteps in attending the [[University of Colorado Boulder]] on the scholarship offered to all Colorado high school valedictorians, intending to go to medical school and major in chemistry.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=29}}<ref name="swabresny">{{cite news |last=Martin |first=Douglas |date=May 2, 2004 |title=Sam White, 91, researcher on effects of A-Bombs, dies |newspaper=New York Times |agency=(obituary) |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/02/us/sam-white-91-researcher-on-effects-of-a-bombs-dies.html?_r=1 |url-status=live |access-date=May 3, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171213143933/http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/02/us/sam-white-91-researcher-on-effects-of-a-bombs-dies.html?_r=1 |archive-date=December 13, 2017}}</ref> Though he joined the [[Phi Gamma Delta]] fraternity on campus, he stuck to a strict routine of working and studying with little to no social life.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=29–30}} However, he would become a star athlete after playing as an [[1937 College Football All-America Team|All-American]] [[Halfback (American football)|halfback]] for the [[Colorado Buffaloes football|Colorado Buffaloes football team]],<ref name="usa today">{{Cite news |author=Joan Biskupic |url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2002/04/15/white-obit.htm |title=Ex-Supreme Court Justice Byron White dies |date=April 15, 2002 |work=[[USA Today]] |author-link=Joan Biskupic |access-date=October 20, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090212023359/http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2002/04/15/white-obit.htm |archive-date=February 12, 2009 |url-status=live}}</ref> winning a series of victories to become among the most acclaimed players in the country.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=30–31}}{{Sfn|Schaeper|Schaeper|p=96|2010}}
==Legal career==
[[File:White and R. Kennedy 1961.jpg|left|thumb|Byron White (left) with Robert Kennedy in 1961]]
After World War II, he attended [[Yale Law School]], graduating ''[[magna cum laude]]'' in 1946. During his years at Yale Law, he served as Chairman of the Conservative Party of the [[Yale Political Union]], preceded by [[Homer Daniels Babbidge]] and succeeded by [[Johnston Redmond Livingston]].<ref name="hutchinson">Dennis J. Hutchinson, ''The Man Who Once Was Whizzer White: a Portrait of Justice Byron R. White'', (Glencoe, The Free Press, 1998)</ref>


In 1935, Sam White was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Oxford University. After news of his brother's success became a local sensation, White saw his brother as an inspiration and felt pressured to achieve the scholarship himself.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=31–32}} He served as student body president his senior year, switched his major to the humanities, and graduated [[Phi Beta Kappa]] and valedictorian from the University of Colorado in 1938 with a [[Bachelor of Arts]] degree in [[economics]].{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=37, 43–44, 48}}<ref name="usa today" /> In his last year, the Colorado Buffaloes went undefeated,{{Refn|As a senior, White led the [[1937 Colorado Buffaloes football team]] to an undefeated 8–0 regular season, but they lost to favored [[1937 Rice Owls football team|Rice]], 28–14 in the [[1938 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] on New Year's Day.<ref name=cstmlain>{{cite news |url=http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1938/01/02/page/31/article/rice-wins-28-14-whizzer-white-meets-mr-lain |newspaper=Chicago Sunday Tribune |agency=Associated Press |title=Rice wins 28-14; Whizzer White meets Mr. Lain |date=January 2, 1938 |page=1, part 2 |access-date=May 3, 2016 |archive-date=July 1, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160701230848/http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1938/01/02/page/31/article/rice-wins-28-14-whizzer-white-meets-mr-lain/ |url-status=live }}</ref> He was the runner-up (behind [[Yale Bulldogs football|Yale]] [[quarterback]] [[Clint Frank]]) for the [[Heisman Trophy]],<ref name=mscfgn1>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=SfwZAAAAIBAJ&pg=5741%2C123582 |newspaper=Milwaukee Sentinel |agency=Associated Press |title=Clint Frank voted U.S. gridder no. 1 |date=December 1, 1937 |page=21 }}{{Dead link|date=March 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> and also played [[Colorado Buffaloes men's basketball|basketball]] and [[College baseball|baseball]] at CU. The basketball team advanced to the finals of the inaugural [[National Invitation Tournament]] at [[Madison Square Garden (1925)|Madison Square Garden]] in March [[1938 National Invitation Tournament|1938]].<ref name=ctiffct>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=GXAzAAAAIBAJ&pg=2899%2C4364399 |newspaper=Lodi News-Sentinel |location=California |agency=United Press |title=Colorado, Temple in finals for cage title |date=March 16, 1938 |page=5 |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-date=August 30, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210830123958/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=GXAzAAAAIBAJ&pg=2899%2C4364399 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name=cdtnit38f>{{cite news |url=http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1938/03/17/page/20/article/temple-routs-colorado-five-60-36-in-final |newspaper=Chicago Daily Tribune |agency=Associated Press |title=Temple routs Colorado five, 60-36, in final |date=March 17, 1938 |page=20 |access-date=May 3, 2016 |archive-date=July 1, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160701232141/http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1938/03/17/page/20/article/temple-routs-colorado-five-60-36-in-final/ |url-status=live }}</ref>|group=note}}{{Sfn|Irish|2003|p=885}} and White's status as a football star earned him the moniker "Whizzer White" by the student newspaper.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=39}} After months of study, White also attained the Rhodes Scholarship, deferring it for a year to play professional football before attending [[Hertford College, Oxford|Hertford College]].{{Refn|White originally planned to attend Oxford in 1938 and not play pro football.<ref name=sshj>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=k0osAAAAIBAJ&pg=1829%2C3258259 |newspaper=Sunday Spartanburg Herald Journal |location=South Carolina |agency=Associated Press |title=Whizzer winds up his career on gridiron |date=December 4, 1938 |page=24 |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-date=September 1, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210901030022/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=k0osAAAAIBAJ&pg=1829%2C3258259 |url-status=live }}</ref> However, he was selected fourth overall in the [[1938 NFL draft]], held in December 1937, by the [[National Football League|NFL]]'s [[1938 Pittsburgh Pirates (NFL) season|Pittsburgh Pirates]] (now [[Pittsburgh Steelers|Steelers]]),<ref name="usa today"/><ref>[http://www.nfl.com/draft/history/fulldraft?season=1938&round=round1#round1 National Football League: NFL Draft History] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305210131/http://www.nfl.com/draft/history/fulldraft?season=1938&round=round1#round1 |date=March 5, 2016 }}; see also [[1938 NFL draft]].</ref> and became a Rhodes Scholar days later.<ref name=bbwwrs37>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=8FtPAAAAIBAJ&pg=1524%2C1865760 |newspaper=Bend Bulletin |location=Oregon |agency=United Press |title=Whizzer White Rhodes Scholar |date=December 21, 1937 |page=3 |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-date=September 1, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210901121247/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=8FtPAAAAIBAJ&pg=1524%2C1865760 |url-status=live }}</ref>
After serving as a [[List of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States#Chief Justice|law clerk]] to Chief Justice [[Fred M. Vinson|Fred Vinson]], White returned to Denver.


Oxford allowed White to delay his start to early 1939, so he accepted the Pittsburgh offer in August and played the [[1938 Pittsburgh Pirates (NFL) season|1938]] season in the NFL.<ref name=sshj/><ref name=ppcmbky>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=VU0bAAAAIBAJ&pg=1926%2C691999 |newspaper=Pittsburgh Press |last=Burcky |first=Claire M. |title='Whizzer' finally decides to play with Pirates |date=August 1, 1938 |page=21 |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-date=August 31, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831050041/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=VU0bAAAAIBAJ&pg=1926%2C691999 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name=lodiup38>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=7sczAAAAIBAJ&pg=5206%2C4390260 |newspaper=Lodi News-Sentinel |location=California |agency=United Press |title=Whizzer White accepts pro grid offer |date=August 2, 1938 |page=7 |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-date=August 31, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831182726/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=7sczAAAAIBAJ&pg=5206%2C4390260 |url-status=live }}</ref> He led the league in rushing as a 21-year-old rookie and was its highest-paid player.<ref name="usa today"/>|group=note}}<ref name="supreme court">{{Cite book
White practiced in Denver for roughly fifteen years with the law firm now known as [[Davis Graham & Stubbs]]. This was a time in which the Denver business community flourished, and White rendered legal service to that flourishing community. White was for the most part a transactional attorney. He drafted contracts and advised insolvent companies, and he argued the occasional case in court.<ref name="hutchinson" />
| title = The United States Supreme Court
| author = Christopher L. Tomlins
| publisher = [[Houghton Mifflin]]
| year = 2005
| isbn = 0618329692
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Fy8DjOIxDm0C
| access-date = October 21, 2008
| archive-date = February 10, 2014
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140210065836/http://books.google.com/books?id=Fy8DjOIxDm0C
| url-status = live
}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=College Notes |journal=[[Hertford College, Oxford|Hertford College Magazine]] |date=May 1961 |volume=48 |pages=1–2 |url=https://www.hertford.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/1961-No.-48-The-Hertford-College-Magazine.pdf |access-date=7 February 2022 |archive-date=February 7, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220207182226/https://www.hertford.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/1961-No.-48-The-Hertford-College-Magazine.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>


=== Oxford ===
During the [[United States presidential election, 1960]], White put his football celebrity to use as chair of John F. Kennedy's campaign in Colorado. White had first met the candidate when White was a Rhodes scholar and Kennedy's father, [[Joseph Kennedy]], was Ambassador to the Court of St. James.<ref name="usa today"/> During the Kennedy administration, White served as [[United States Deputy Attorney General]], the number two man in the [[United States Department of Justice|Justice Department]], under [[Robert F. Kennedy]]. He took the lead in protecting the [[Freedom Ride]]rs in 1961, negotiating with [[Alabama]] Governor [[John Malcolm Patterson]].<ref name="usa today"/>
On January 3, 1939, White departed to England aboard the [[SS Europa (1928)|SS ''Europa'']], arriving in [[Southampton]] on January 9 harassed by reporters wishing to see a "Yank at Oxford."{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=124–125}}<ref name="rdeaglwwtox">{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=jQwkAAAAIBAJ&pg=3230%2C5832345 |newspaper=Reading Eagle |location=Pennsylvania |agency=United Press |title=Whizzer White leaves Pirates for Oxford, Eng |date=December 28, 1938 |page=14 |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-date=August 31, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831011156/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=jQwkAAAAIBAJ&pg=3230%2C5832345 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="ppgstovr">{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=mLhRAAAAIBAJ&pg=2665%2C3423632 |newspaper=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette |last=Sell |first=Jack |title=Whizzer stops over here on way to Oxford |date=December 28, 1938 |page=14 |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-date=August 31, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831084257/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=mLhRAAAAIBAJ&pg=2665%2C3423632 |url-status=live }}</ref> Upon moving into Hertford College with the intent of studying law, he befriended the future mathematician [[George Piranian]] and was assigned with [[C. H. S. Fifoot]] as a tutor.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=124, 127}} White spent his days at Oxford tirelessly studying from day until night, becoming "the only Rhodes scholar who ever worked fourteen hours a day on his studies."{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=129, 133}} During one [[Easter vacation]], he became acquainted with [[Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr.|Joseph P. Kennedy]] and future U.S. president [[John F. Kennedy]] as their father, [[Joseph P. Kennedy Sr.|Joseph Kennedy]], was the [[United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom|U.S. ambassador]] to London.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=133}} In the period of political upheaval just before the Second World War, Oxford students—Rhodes scholars especially—took an active role in international politics, with many American Rhodes scholars beckoning [[Franklin D. Roosevelt|President Roosevelt]] to take action against [[Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)|Spanish nationalists]]. White, however, remained closed in the affairs of politics, rarely speaking out and becoming estranged from other students; he prioritized his studies and physique above all else.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=135–136}}

Following the end of a term, White spent a summer vacation touring France and Germany, settling down in [[Munich]] in order to study the German language and [[Roman law]]. He unexpectedly reunited with John F. Kennedy, who was on his own tour of Europe with [[Torbert Macdonald]], and on one occasion the three were heckled by a mob who recognized their English [[Vehicle registration plates of the United Kingdom|license plates]]. As the oncoming war made it impossible for students to continue studying abroad,{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=146}}<ref name="bvrrch39">{{cite news |date=October 4, 1939 |title=Byron White now student at Yale |page=8 |newspaper=Daily Times |location=Beaver and Rochester, Pennsylvania |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=DakiAAAAIBAJ&pg=5777%2C1091018 |url-status=live |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831012216/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=DakiAAAAIBAJ&pg=5777%2C1091018 |archive-date=August 31, 2021}}</ref> White left the country to return to Oxford in late August 1939, choosing to leave the university in order to continue his legal education at [[Yale Law School]].{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=140–141}}<ref name="wwjhout">{{cite news |date=October 3, 1939 |title=Whizzer White just hides out |page=12 |newspaper=Spokesman-Review |agency=Associated Press |location=Spokane, Washington |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Af9VAAAAIBAJ&pg=3918%2C955319 |url-status=live |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211108182212/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Af9VAAAAIBAJ&pg=3918%2C955319 |archive-date=November 8, 2021}}</ref>

=== Law school ===
Upon enrolling at Yale, White continued his previous routine of studying fourteen hours a day, taking breaks only to exercise in the [[Payne Whitney Gymnasium|gymnasium]] where he would frequent the basketball courts, often clashing against Yale halfback [[Clint Frank]] in [[pick-up game]]s. Despite attempts by the [[New York Giants]] and other NFL teams to get him to sign back into football, White publicly repudiated his football career, telling a local newspaper that "my football playing days are over. I'm started on a law career."{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=147–148}}

At the time, Yale was home to a number of [[Legal realism|legal realists]] who rebuked [[Lochner v. New York|''Lochner'']] and [[substantive due process]], and were generally scholars with an expertise in legal fields outside of [[constitutional law]].{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=152–153}} Two of such realists—[[Myres S. McDougal]] and [[Arthur Corbin]]—had a significant influence on White early in law school.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=154–155}} Future justice [[Potter Stewart]], one year ahead of him at the university, remembered White as "a serious-minded, scholarly, and rather taciturn (except when he found himself engaged in lively colloquy with J. W. Moore in his class on Procedure), and extremely likable young man with steel-rimmed eyeglasses."{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=157}}

White earned the highest grades in his first-year class and was subsequently awarded the Edgar M. Cullen Prize, an award given to the highest-achieving first-year student.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=157}} During the summer, he returned to Colorado and attended summer school at the [[University of Colorado Law School]], got an [[appendectomy]], and became a [[waiter]] at his old fraternity.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=156–157}} White would turn down an offer to join the editorship of the ''[[Yale Law Journal]]'',{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=160}} instead taking a leave of absence to promptly return to professional football as a member of the [[Detroit Lions]].{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=158–159}}<ref name="dswwstp">{{cite news |date=August 20, 1940 |title=Detroit signs "Whizzer" White |page=10 |newspaper=St. Petersburg Times |agency=INS |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=GU8wAAAAIBAJ&pg=2116%2C4008675 |url-status=live |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831053759/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=GU8wAAAAIBAJ&pg=2116%2C4008675 |archive-date=August 31, 2021}}</ref><ref name="stlastdt">{{cite news |last=French |first=Bob |date=August 27, 1941 |title=Whizzer White still a student |page=22 |newspaper=Toledo Blade |location=Ohio |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=MfEjAAAAIBAJ&pg=2132%2C3776085 |url-status=live |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210829221146/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=MfEjAAAAIBAJ&pg=2132%2C3776085 |archive-date=August 29, 2021}}</ref>

=== Professional football ===
White came into the National Football League with the then-[[Pittsburgh Pirates (football)|Pirates]] in the summer of 1938 as a widely-heralded college star.<ref name=Shake>[https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-pittsburgh-press-football-pirates-sh/160355046/ "Football Pirates Shake Off Detroit Lions Bump for Tomorrow's Opener,"] ''Pittsburgh Press,'' Sept. 10, 1938, p. 10.</ref> The $15,800 contract he had signed made White the NFL's highest-paid player.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Los Angeles Times 07 Aug 1978, page 3 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/384183844/ |access-date=2023-01-23 |website=Newspapers.com |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Freedman |first=Lew |title=Pittsburgh Steelers: The Complete Illustrated History |publisher=MBI Publishing Company LLC |year=2009 |isbn=9780760336458 |location= United States |chapter=1930s: Getting started}}</ref> About his first game, one Pittsburgh journalist said he "looked better as an individual than the Pirates did as a team".<ref name="Shake" /> Despite leading the NFL in rushing yards in [[1938 NFL season|1938]],<ref>White gained 567 yards on the ground in 1938, leading the league's second best runner, [[Tuffy Leemans]] by more than 100 yards. See: Carl L. Storck (ed.), ''Official Guide of the National Football League 1939.'' New York: American Sports Publishing Co., 1939; pp. 53–54.</ref> White did not appear for the [[1939 Detroit Lions season|1939 season]].<ref>Tod Maher and Bob Gill (eds.), ''The Pro Football Encyclopedia: The Complete and Definitive Record of Professional Football.'' New York: Macmillan USA, 1997; p. 842.</ref> He would reappear for the [[Detroit Lions]] in [[1940 Detroit Lions season|1940]] and would again top the world of "postgraduate football" with a league-leading performance.{{Citation needed|date=December 2024}}

White played a total of three NFL seasons — 33 games in all.<ref>[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/enwiki/w/WhitWh00.htm Whizzer White Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Draft, College] ''Whizzer White statistics'', Pro Football Reference, www.pro-football-reference.com</ref> He led the league in rushing twice during that short interval, and was elected the NFL's first team [[All-Pro]] [[halfback (gridiron football)|right halfback]] in 1940.<ref>George Strickler (ed.), ''Roster and Record Manual 1941.'' Chicago: National Football League, 1941; p. 68.</ref>

=== World War II ===
At the end of [[1941 Detroit Lions season|1941 Lions season]], White returned to Yale to await a call to serve in the [[U.S. navy|U.S. Navy]] after the [[Attack on Pearl Harbor]]; in May 1942, he was assigned to [[naval intelligence]] and spent weeks training at [[Dartmouth College]] and in [[New York City]].{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=172}} His original intention was to join the [[United States Marine|Marine Corps]], but was kept out due to being [[colorblind]].<ref name="usa today" />

In July 1943, White was stationed at [[Nouméa]], New Caledonia, tasked with protecting [[Guadalcanal]] and [[Tulagi]]; he narrowly missed being assigned with John F. Kennedy, his former acquaintance who had also been stationed at Tulagi before being reassigned to the [[Russell Islands]].{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=173}} During World War II, White served as an [[Military intelligence|intelligence]] officer in the [[United States Navy|Navy]], and was stationed in the [[Asiatic-Pacific Theater|Pacific Theatre]].<ref name=ptstffdes>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=h9RSAAAAIBAJ&pg=5641%2C1419005 |newspaper=Deseret News |location=Salt Lake City, Utah |agency=Associated Press |last=James |first=Rembert |title='Whizzer' White now on PT staff |date=September 15, 1943 |page=1 |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-date=August 29, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210829234152/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=h9RSAAAAIBAJ&pg=5641%2C1419005 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name=nmgtww>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=4fQZAAAAIBAJ&pg=3761%2C6234393 |newspaper=Milwaukee Journal |agency=United Press |title=Navy medal given to Whizzer White |date=June 15, 1944 |page=12, part 2 }}{{Dead link|date=March 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref name=wwsrvbh>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=YRxSAAAAIBAJ&pg=6710%2C6126263 |newspaper=Deseret News |location=Salt Lake City, Utah |agency=INS |last=Alexander |first=John D. |title=Whizzer White survives Bunker Hill |date=June 29, 1945 |page=12 |access-date=October 15, 2020 |archive-date=August 31, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210831050041/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=YRxSAAAAIBAJ&pg=6710%2C6126263 |url-status=live }}</ref> He wrote the intelligence report on the sinking of future President [[John F. Kennedy]]'s ''[[Motor Torpedo Boat PT-109|PT-109]]''.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=175}} For his service, White was awarded two [[Bronze Star Medal|Bronze Star]] medals,<ref name="usa today"/> and was honorably discharged as a [[Lieutenant commander (United States)|lieutenant commander]] in 1945.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Wright |first=Alfred |date=December 10, 1962 |title=A Modest All-America Who Sits on the Highest Bench - |url=https://vault.si.com/vault/1962/12/10/a-modest-allamerica-who-sits-on-the-highest-bench |magazine=Sports Illustrated |access-date=October 18, 2020 |archive-date=October 18, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201018192954/https://vault.si.com/vault/1962/12/10/a-modest-allamerica-who-sits-on-the-highest-bench |url-status=live }}</ref>

==Legal career==
[[File:White and R. Kennedy 1961.jpg|left|thumb|Byron White with Robert Kennedy in 1961]]
After his military service, White returned to [[Yale Law School]], graduating in 1946 ranked first in his class with a [[Bachelor of Laws]] degree, ''[[Latin honors#United States|magna cum laude]]'', and membership in the [[Order of the Coif]].{{Sfn|Hearing before the Committee on the Judiciary|1962|p=6, 8}} White served as a [[law clerk]] to Chief Justice [[Fred M. Vinson]] of the [[Supreme Court of the United States|U.S. Supreme Court]] from 1946 to 1947, then returned to Colorado and entered private practice in [[Denver]] with the law firm now known as [[Davis Graham & Stubbs]]. This was a time in which the Denver economy flourished, and White rendered legal service to the business community. White was for the most part a transactional attorney; he drafted contracts and advised insolvent companies, and he argued the occasional case in court.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=226}}

During the [[1960 United States presidential election|1960 presidential election]], White used his status as a football star to aid him as chair of John F. Kennedy's campaign in Colorado. White had first met the candidate when White was a Rhodes scholar and Kennedy's father, [[Joseph P. Kennedy Sr.|Joseph Kennedy]], was Ambassador to the [[Court of St. James's]].<ref name="usa today" /> During the Kennedy administration, White served as [[United States Deputy Attorney General]], the number two man in the [[United States Department of Justice|Justice Department]], under [[Robert F. Kennedy]]. He took the lead in protecting the [[Freedom Riders]] in 1961, negotiating with Alabama Governor [[John Malcolm Patterson]].<ref name="usa today" />


==Supreme Court==
==Supreme Court==
[[File:Virginia Thomas.JPG|thumb|right|250px|Byron White swearing in new Supreme Court Justice [[Clarence Thomas]], as wife [[Virginia Lamp Thomas]] looks on.]]
Acquiring renown within the Kennedy Administration for his humble manner and sharp mind, he was appointed by Kennedy in 1962 to succeed Justice [[Charles Evans Whittaker]], who retired for disability. Kennedy said at the time: "He has excelled at everything. And I know that he will excel on the highest court in the land."<ref name="usa today"/> The 44-year-old White was approved by a voice vote.<ref name="usa today"/> Upon the request of Vice President-Elect [[Al Gore]], Justice White administered the oath of office on January 20, 1993 to the 45th U.S. Vice President. It was the only time White administered an oath of office to a Vice President.


<gallery mode="packed" heights="220px">
White's Supreme Court tenure was the fourth-longest of the 20th century.<ref name="usa today"/>
Message of President John F. Kennedy nominating Byron R. White to be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, 04-03-19 - NARA - 306363.tif|John F. Kennedy's letter to the Senate nominating White to the Supreme Court
During his service on the high court, White wrote 994 opinions. He was fierce in questioning attorneys in court,<ref name="usa today"/> and his votes and opinions on the bench reflect an ideology that has been notoriously difficult for popular journalists and legal scholars alike to pin down. He was seen as a disappointment by some Kennedy supporters who wished he would have joined the more [[Liberalism|liberal]] wing of the court in its opinions on ''Miranda v. Arizona'' and ''Roe v. Wade''.<ref name="supreme court"/>
US Supreme Court November 19, 1962.png|The Supreme Court seen pictured on November 19, 1962. White (top left) was the Court's second most junior justice, after [[Arthur Goldberg]], having arrived on the bench in April.
File:Burger Court in 1973.jpg|The Supreme Court pictured in 1973, White is pictured at bottom right
</gallery>

On April 3, 1962, President Kennedy nominated White to be an [[Associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States|associate justice]] of the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]], succeeding [[Charles Evans Whittaker]].<ref name="SCnominations">{{cite web| title=Supreme Court Nominations (1789-Present)| url=https://www.senate.gov/legislative/nominations/SupremeCourtNominations1789present.htm| publisher=United States Senate| location=Washington, D.C.| access-date=February 16, 2022| archive-date=October 7, 2019| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191007075720/https://www.senate.gov/legislative/nominations/SupremeCourtNominations1789present.htm| url-status=live}}</ref> The president said of White—a longtime friend of his—that "he has excelled at everything. And I know that he will excel on the highest court in the land."<ref name="usa today" /> White was confirmed on April 11, 1962, by a [[voice vote]].<ref name="SCnominations" /> He took the judicial oath of office on April 16, 1962, and served until June 28, 1993.<ref>{{cite web| url=https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/members_text.aspx| title=Justices 1789 to Present| publisher=Supreme Court of the United States| location=Washington, D.C.| access-date=February 16, 2022| archive-date=April 15, 2010| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100415034624/https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/members_text.aspx| url-status=live}}</ref> His Supreme Court tenure was the fourth-longest of the 20th century.<ref name="usa today" />

Upon the request of Vice President-Elect [[Al Gore]], White administered the oath of office on January 20, 1993, to Gore. It was the only time White administered an oath of office to a vice president. During his service on the high court, White wrote 994 opinions. He was fierce in questioning attorneys in court,<ref name="usa today" /> and his votes and opinions on the bench reflect an ideology that has been notoriously difficult for popular journalists and legal scholars alike to pin down. He was seen as a disappointment by some Kennedy supporters who wished he had joined the more liberal wing of the court in its opinions on ''Miranda v. Arizona'' and ''Roe v. Wade''.<ref name="supreme court" />


White often took a narrow, fact-specific view of cases before the Court and generally refused to make broad pronouncements on constitutional doctrine or adhere to a specific judicial philosophy. He preferred to take what he viewed as a practical approach to the law to one based in any legal philosophy.<ref name="usa today"/><ref name="supreme court"/> In the tradition of the [[New Deal]], White frequently supported a broad view and expansion of governmental powers.<ref name="usa today"/><ref>(see ''[[New York v. United States (1992)|New York v. United States]]'', 488 U.S. 1041 (1992) (White, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)).</ref> He consistently voted against creating constitutional restrictions on the police, dissenting in the landmark 1966 case of ''[[Miranda v. Arizona]]''.<ref name="usa today"/> In his dissent in that case he noted that aggressive police practices enhance the individual rights of law-abiding citizens. His [[jurisprudence]] has sometimes been praised for adhering to the doctrine of [[judicial restraint]].<ref>(See Dennis Hutchinson, "Two Cheers for Judicial Restraint: Justice White and the Role of the Supreme Court," 74 U. Colo. L. Rev. 1409 (2003)).</ref>
White often took a narrow, fact-specific view of cases before the Court and generally refused to make broad pronouncements on constitutional doctrine or adhere to a specific judicial philosophy, preferring what he viewed as a practical approach to the law.<ref name="usa today" /><ref name="supreme court" /> In the tradition of the [[New Deal]], White frequently supported a broad view and expansion of governmental powers.<ref name="usa today" /><ref>''[[New York v. United States (1992)|New York v. United States]]'', 488 U.S. 1041 (1992). White, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.</ref> He consistently voted against creating constitutional restrictions on the police, dissenting in the landmark 1966 case ''[[Miranda v. Arizona]]''.<ref name="usa today" /> In that dissent, he said that aggressive police practices enhance the individual rights of law-abiding citizens. His jurisprudence has sometimes been praised for adhering to the doctrine of [[judicial restraint]].<ref>{{cite journal |first=Dennis |last=Hutchinson |title=Two Cheers for Judicial Restraint: Justice White and the Role of the Supreme Court |volume=74 |journal=U. Colo. L. Rev. |page=1409 |year=2003 }}</ref>


===Substantive due process doctrine===
===Substantive due process doctrine===
Frequently a critic of the doctrine of "[[substantive due process]]", which involves the judiciary reading substantive content into the term "liberty" in the Due Process Clause of the [[Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fifth Amendment]] and [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]], White dissented in the controversial 1973 case of ''[[Roe v. Wade]]''. But White voted to strike down a state ban on [[contraceptive]]s in the 1965 case of ''[[Griswold v. Connecticut]]'', although he did not join the majority opinion, which famously asserted a "[[right of privacy]]" on the basis of the "penumbras" of the [[United States Bill of Rights|Bill of Rights]]. White and Justice [[William Rehnquist]] were the only dissenters from the Court's decision in ''Roe'', though White's dissent used stronger language, suggesting that ''Roe'' was "an exercise in raw judicial power" and criticizing the decision for "interposing a constitutional barrier to state efforts to protect human life." White, who usually adhered firmly to the doctrine of ''[[stare decisis]]'', remained a critic of ''Roe'' throughout his term on the bench.<ref>(See ''Thornburg v. American Coll. of Obst. & Gyn.'' 476 U.S. 747 (1986) (White, J., dissenting))</ref>
Frequently a critic of the doctrine of "[[substantive due process]]", which involves the judiciary reading substantive content into the term "liberty" in the Due Process Clause of the [[Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fifth Amendment]] and [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]], White's first published opinion as a Supreme Court Justice was a joint dissent with Justice Clark in ''[[Robinson v. California]]'' (1962), foreshadowing his career-long distaste for the doctrine. In ''Robinson'', he criticized the remainder of the Court's unprecedented expansion of the Eighth Amendment's prohibition of "cruel and unusual punishment" to strike down a California law providing for civil commitment of drug addicts. He argued that the Court was "imposing its own philosophical predilections" on the state in this exercise of judicial power, although its historic "allergy to substantive due process" would never permit it to strike down a state's economic regulatory law in such a manner.


In the same vein, he dissented in the controversial 1973 case ''[[Roe v. Wade]]''. White voted to strike down a state ban on [[contraceptive]]s in the 1965 case of ''[[Griswold v. Connecticut]]'', although he did not join the majority opinion, which famously asserted a "[[right of privacy]]" on the basis of the "penumbras" of the [[United States Bill of Rights|Bill of Rights]]. White and Justice [[William Rehnquist]] were the only dissenters from the Court's decision in ''Roe'', though White's dissent used stronger language, suggesting that ''Roe'' was "an exercise in raw judicial power" and criticizing the decision for "interposing a constitutional barrier to state efforts to protect human life." White, who usually adhered firmly to the doctrine of ''[[stare decisis]]'', remained a critic of ''Roe'' throughout his term on the bench and frequently voted to uphold laws restricting abortion, including in ''[[Planned Parenthood v. Casey]]'' in 1992.<ref>''Thornburg v. American Coll. of Obst. & Gyn.'' 476 U.S. 747 (1986). White, J., dissenting.</ref>
White explained his general views on the validity of substantive due process at length in his dissent in ''[[Moore v. City of East Cleveland]]'':


White explained his general views on the validity of substantive due process at length in his dissent in ''[[Moore v. City of East Cleveland]]'' (1977):
<blockquote>The Judiciary, including this Court, is the most vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with judge-made constitutional law having little or no cognizable roots in the language or even the design of the Constitution. Realizing that the present construction of the Due Process Clause represents a major [[judicial gloss]] on its terms, as well as on the anticipation of the Framers, and that much of the underpinning for the broad, substantive application of the Clause disappeared in the conflict between the Executive and the Judiciary in 1930s and 1940s, the Court should be extremely reluctant to breathe still further substantive content into the Due Process clause so as to strike down legislation adopted by a State or city to promote its welfare. Whenever the Judiciary does so, it unavoidably pre-empts for itself another part of the governance of the country without express constitutional authority.</blockquote>


<blockquote>The Judiciary, including this Court, is the most vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with judge-made constitutional law having little or no cognizable roots in the language or even the design of the Constitution. Realizing that the present construction of the Due Process Clause represents a major [[Gloss (annotation)#In law|judicial gloss]] on its terms, as well as on the anticipation of the Framers, and that much of the underpinning for the broad, substantive application of the Clause disappeared in the conflict between the Executive and the Judiciary in the 1930s and 1940s, the Court should be extremely reluctant to breathe still further substantive content into the Due Process clause so as to strike down legislation adopted by a State or city to promote its welfare. Whenever the Judiciary does so, it unavoidably pre-empts for itself another part of the governance of the country without express constitutional authority.</blockquote>
White parted company with Rehnquist in strongly supporting the Supreme Court decisions striking down laws that discriminated on the basis of sex, agreeing with Justice [[William J. Brennan]] in 1973's ''[[Frontiero v. Richardson]]'' that laws discriminating on the basis of sex should be subject to strict scrutiny. However, only three justices joined Brennan in his opinion in ''Frontiero''; in later cases [[gender discrimination]] cases would be subjected to intermediate scrutiny (see ''[[Craig v. Boren]]'').


White parted company with Rehnquist in strongly supporting the Supreme Court decisions striking down laws that discriminated on the basis of sex, agreeing with Justice [[William J. Brennan]] in 1973's ''[[Frontiero v. Richardson]]'' that such laws should be subject to strict scrutiny. Only three justices joined Brennan's plurality opinion in ''Frontiero''; later [[gender discrimination]] cases would be subjected to intermediate scrutiny (see ''[[Craig v. Boren]]''). In ''[[Rostker v. Goldberg]]'', White joined Brennan and Marshall in dissent arguing that male-only [[Selective Service]] registration was unconstitutional.<ref>{{cite web |last1=White |first1=Byron |title=Rostker v. Goldberg |url=https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/453/57/#tab-opinion-1954231 |website=Justia |access-date=9 April 2022 |archive-date=April 9, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220409020032/https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/453/57/#tab-opinion-1954231 |url-status=live }}</ref>
White wrote the majority opinion in ''[[Bowers v. Hardwick]]'' (1986), which upheld [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]'s anti-sodomy law against a substantive due process attack.<ref name="usa today"/>

White wrote the majority opinion in ''[[Bowers v. Hardwick]]'' (1986), which upheld [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]'s anti-sodomy law against a substantive due process attack:<ref name="usa today" />


<blockquote>The Court is most vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with judge-made constitutional law having little or no cognizable roots in the language or design of the Constitution.... There should be, therefore, great resistance to ... redefining the category of rights deemed to be fundamental. Otherwise, the Judiciary necessarily takes to itself further authority to govern the country without express constitutional authority.</blockquote>
<blockquote>The Court is most vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with judge-made constitutional law having little or no cognizable roots in the language or design of the Constitution.... There should be, therefore, great resistance to ... redefining the category of rights deemed to be fundamental. Otherwise, the Judiciary necessarily takes to itself further authority to govern the country without express constitutional authority.</blockquote>


White's opinion in ''Bowers'' shows the consistency of his commitment to judicial restraint, and his opposition to [[Usurper|usurpation of power]] by the Judiciary. His argument in the case typified White's fact-specific, deferential style of deciding cases: White's opinion treated the issue in that case as presenting only the question of whether homosexuals had a fundamental right to engage in sexual activity, even though the statute in ''Bowers'' potentially applied to heterosexual sodomy (see ''Bowers'', 478 U.S. 186, 188, n. 1). A year after White's death, ''Bowers'' was overruled in ''[[Lawrence v. Texas]]'' (2003).
White's opinion in ''Bowers'' typified his fact-specific, deferential style, treating the issue in that case as presenting only the question of whether homosexuals had a fundamental right to privacy, even though the statute in ''Bowers'' potentially applied to heterosexual sodomy.<ref>''Bowers'', 478 U.S. 186, 188, n. 1.</ref> Georgia, however, conceded during oral argument that the law would be inapplicable to married couples under the precedent set forth in ''[[Griswold v. Connecticut]]''.<ref>Oral argument of ''Bowers v. Hardwick'', available at Oyez.org, https://www.oyez.org/cases/1980-1989/1985/1985_85_140 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924083315/http://www.oyez.org/cases/1980-1989/1985/1985_85_140 |date=September 24, 2015 }}</ref> A year after White's death, ''Bowers'' was overruled in ''[[Lawrence v. Texas]]'' (2003).


===Death penalty===
===Death penalty===
[[File:US Supreme Court Justice Byron White - 1976 official portrait.jpg|thumb|upright=0.95|Official portrait, 1976]]
White took a middle course on the issue of the death penalty: he was one of five justices who voted in ''[[Furman v. Georgia]]'' (1972) to strike down several state capital punishment statutes, voicing concern over the arbitrary nature in which the death penalty was administered. The Furman decision ended [[capital punishment in the U.S.]] until 1977, when [[Gary Gilmore]], who decided not to appeal his death sentence, was executed by firing squad. White, however, was not against the death penalty in all forms: he voted to uphold the death penalty statutes at issue in ''[[Gregg v. Georgia]]'' (1976), even the mandatory death penalty schemes struck down by the Court.
White took a middle course on the issue of the death penalty: he was one of five justices who voted in ''[[Furman v. Georgia]]'' (1972) to strike down several state capital punishment statutes, voicing concern over the arbitrary way in which the death penalty was administered. The Furman decision ended [[capital punishment in the U.S.]] until the court's ruling in ''[[Gregg v. Georgia]]'' (1976). In that case, White voted to uphold Georgia's new capital punishment law.


White accepted the position that the [[Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution]] required that all punishments be "proportional" to the crime;<ref>(see ''Harmelin v. Michigan'', 501 U.S. 957 (1991) (White, J., dissenting))</ref> thus, he wrote the opinion in ''[[Coker v. Georgia]]'' (1977), which invalidated the death penalty for rape of a 16-year-old married girl. However, his first reported Supreme Court decision was a dissent in ''[[Robinson v. California]]'' (1962), in which he criticized the Court for extending the reach of the Eighth Amendment. In ''Robinson'' the Court for the first time expanded the constitutional prohibition of “cruel and unusual punishments” from examining the nature of the punishment imposed and whether it was an uncommon punishment − as, for example, in the cases of flogging, branding, banishment, or electrocution − to deciding whether any punishment at all was appropriate for the defendant’s conduct. White said: “If this case involved economic regulation, the present Court's allergy to substantive due process would surely save the statute and prevent the Court from imposing its own philosophical predilections upon state legislatures or Congress. Consistent with his view in ''Robinson'', White thought that imposing the death penalty on [[Minor (law)|minors]] was constitutional, and he was one of the three dissenters in ''[[Thompson v. Oklahoma]]'' (1988), a decision that declared that the death penalty as applied to offenders below 16 years of age was unconstitutional as a cruel and unusual punishment.
White accepted the position that the [[Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution]] required that all punishments be "proportional" to the crime;<ref>''Harmelin v. Michigan'', 501 U.S. 957 (1991). White, J., dissenting.</ref> thus, in ''[[Coker v. Georgia]]'' (1977), he wrote the opinion that invalidated the death penalty for rape of a 16-year-old married girl. His first reported Supreme Court decision was a dissent in ''[[Robinson v. California]]'' (1962), in which he criticized the Court for extending the reach of the Eighth Amendment. In ''Robinson'' the Court for the first time expanded the constitutional prohibition of "cruel and unusual punishments" from examining the nature of the punishment imposed and whether it was an uncommon punishment − as, for example, in the cases of flogging, branding, banishment, or electrocution − to deciding whether any punishment at all was appropriate for the defendant's conduct. White said: "If this case involved economic regulation, the present Court's allergy to substantive due process would surely save the statute and prevent the Court from imposing its own philosophical predilections upon state legislatures or Congress." Consistent with his view in ''Robinson'', White thought that imposing the death penalty on minors was constitutional, and he was one of the three dissenters in ''[[Thompson v. Oklahoma]]'' (1988), a decision that declared that the death penalty as applied to offenders below 16 years of age was unconstitutional as a cruel and unusual punishment.


===Abortion===
===Abortion===
Along with Justice [[William Rehnquist]], White was a dissenter in the ''[[Roe v. Wade]]'' decision castigating the majority for holding that the U.S. Constitution "values the convenience, whim or caprice of the putative mother more than the life or potential life of the [[fetus]]."
Along with Justice [[William Rehnquist]], White dissented in ''[[Roe v. Wade]]'' (the dissenting decision was in the companion case, ''[[Doe v. Bolton]]''), castigating the majority for holding that the U.S. Constitution "values the convenience, whim or caprice of the putative mother more than the life or potential life of the fetus."<ref>''Doe v. Bolton'', [http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&vol=410&invol=179 410 U.S. 179] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041204060248/http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=410&invol=179 |date=December 4, 2004 }} (1973). Findlaw.com. Retrieved September 10, 2011.</ref>


===Civil rights===
===Civil rights===
[[File:Virginia Thomas.JPG|thumb|upright=1.05|White swears in Justice [[Clarence Thomas]] as Thomas' wife, [[Virginia Lamp Thomas|Virginia Lamp]], looks on (1991)]]
White consistently supported the Court's post-''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]'' attempts to fully [[desegregation|desegregate]] [[Public school (government funded)|public schools]], even through the controversial line of forced busing cases.<ref>(See ''[[Milliken v. Bradley]]'' (White, J., dissenting)).</ref> He voted to uphold [[affirmative action]] remedies to racial inequality in an education setting in the famous ''[[Regents of the University of California v. Bakke]]'' case of 1978. Though White voted to uphold federal affirmative action programs in cases such as ''[[Metro Broadcasting, Inc. v. FCC]]'', 497 U.S. 547 (1990) (later overruled by ''[[Adarand Constructors v. Peña]]'', 515 U.S. 200 (1995)), White voted to strike down an affirmative action plan regarding state contracts in ''[[City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co.|Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co.]]'' (1989).
White consistently supported the Court's post-''[[Brown v. Board of Education]]'' attempts to fully [[school integration in the United States|desegregate public schools]], even through the controversial line of forced busing cases.<ref>(See ''[[Milliken v. Bradley]]'' (White, J., dissenting)).</ref> He voted to uphold [[affirmative action]] remedies to racial inequality in an education setting in the famous ''[[Regents of the University of California v. Bakke]]'' case of 1978. Though White voted to uphold federal affirmative action programs in cases such as ''[[Metro Broadcasting, Inc. v. FCC]]'', 497 U.S. 547 (1990) (later overruled by ''[[Adarand Constructors v. Peña]]'', 515 U.S. 200 (1995)), he voted to strike down an affirmative action plan regarding state contracts in ''[[City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co.|Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co.]]'' (1989).


White dissented in ''[[Runyon v. McCrary]]'' (1976), which held that federal law prohibited [[private school]]s from discriminating on the basis of race. White argued that the legislative history of Title 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (popularly known as the "[[Ku Klux Klan]] Act") indicated that the Act was not designed to prohibit private racial discrimination, but only state-sponsored racial discrimination (as had been held in the ''[[Civil Rights Cases]]'' of 1883). White was concerned about the potential far-reaching impact of holding private racial discrimination illegal, which if taken to its logical conclusion might ban many varied forms of voluntary self-segregation, including social and advocacy groups that limited their membership to blacks:<ref>See Runyon, 427 U.S. 160, 212 (White, J., dissenting)</ref> "Whether such conduct should be condoned or not, whites and blacks will undoubtedly choose to form a variety of associational relationships pursuant to contracts which exclude members of the other race. Social clubs, black and white, and associations designed to further the interests of blacks or whites are but two examples". ''Runyon'' was essentially overruled by 1989's ''Patterson v. McLean Credit Union'', which itself was superseded by the [[Civil Rights Act of 1991]].
White dissented in ''[[Runyon v. McCrary]]'' (1976), which held that federal law prohibited [[private school]]s from discriminating on the basis of race. He argued that the legislative history of 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (popularly known as the "[[Ku Klux Klan]] Act") indicated that the Act was not designed to prohibit private racial discrimination but only state-sponsored racial discrimination (as had been held in the ''[[Civil Rights Cases]]'' of 1883). White was concerned about the potential far-reaching impact of holding private racial discrimination illegal, which if taken to its logical conclusion might ban many varied forms of voluntary self-segregation, including social and advocacy groups that limited their membership to blacks:<ref>See Runyon, 427 U.S. 160, 212 (White, J., dissenting)</ref> "Whether such conduct should be condoned or not, whites and blacks will undoubtedly choose to form a variety of associational relationships pursuant to contracts which exclude members of the other race. Social clubs, black and white, and associations designed to further the interests of blacks or whites are but two examples". ''Runyon'' was essentially overruled by 1989's ''Patterson v. McLean Credit Union'', which itself was superseded by the [[Civil Rights Act of 1991]].


===Relationships with other justices===
===Relationships with other justices===
White said that he was most comfortable on Rehnquist's court. He once said of [[Earl Warren]], "I wasn't exactly in his circle."<ref name="usa today"/> On the Burger Court, the Chief Justice was fond of assigning important criminal procedure and individual rights opinions to White, because of his frequently conservative views on these questions.
White said he was most comfortable on Rehnquist's court. He once said of [[Earl Warren]], "I wasn't exactly in his circle."<ref name="usa today" /> On the Burger Court, the chief justice often assigned important criminal procedure and individual rights opinions to White because of his frequently conservative views on these questions.


===Court operations and retirement===
===Court operations and retirement===
[[File:Byron White with company.jpg|thumb|White (''sitting'') with other members of the Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals]]White frequently urged the Supreme Court to consider [[Circuit split|cases when federal appeals courts were in conflict on issues of federal law]], believing that resolving such was a primary role of the Supreme Court. Thus, White voted to grant [[certiorari]] more often than many of his colleagues; he also wrote numerous opinions dissenting from denials of certiorari. After White (along with fellow Justice [[Harry Blackmun]], who also often voted for liberal grants of certiorari) retired, the number of cases heard each session of the Court declined steeply.<ref>See David M. O'Brien, The Rehnquist Court's Shrinking Plenary Docket, 81 Judicature 58–65 (September/October 1997).</ref>
[[File:White with company.jpg|White with other members of the Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals|right|thumb]]


White disliked the politics of Supreme Court appointments,<ref name="hutchinson">[[Dennis J. Hutchinson]], ''The Man Who Once Was Whizzer White: a Portrait of Justice Byron R. White'', (Glencoe, The Free Press, 1998)</ref> but had great faith in representative democracy, responding to complaints about politicians and mediocrity in government with exhortations to "get more involved and help fix it."<ref>David C. Frederick, Justice White and the Virtue of Modesty, 55 Stanford L.Rev. 21, 27 (2002)</ref> He retired in 1993, during [[Bill Clinton]]'s presidency, saying that "someone else should be permitted to have a like experience."<ref name="usa today" /> When he retired, White had been the only Democrat on the Court.{{Sfn|Greenhouse|2002}} Clinton nominated (and the Senate approved) Justice [[Ruth Bader Ginsburg]], a judge from the [[United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit|U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit]] and a former [[Columbia University]] law professor, to succeed him.
White frequently urged that the Supreme Court should consider cases when federal appeals courts were in conflict on issues of federal law, believing that a primary role of the Supreme Court was to resolve such conflicts. Thus, White voted to grant [[certiorari]] more often than many of his colleagues, and he wrote numerous opinions dissenting from denials of ''certiorari''. After White (along with fellow Justice [[Harry Blackmun]], who also took a liberal line in voting to grant ''certiorari'') retired, the number of cases heard each session of the Court declined steeply.<ref>See David M. O'Brien, The Rehnquist Court's Shrinking Plenary Docket, 81 Judicature 58–65 (September/October 1997).</ref>

White disliked the politics of Supreme Court appointments.<ref name="hutchinson"/> During his interviews for clerks, he mostly wished to discuss football, not legal philosophies; at one point, he turned down future Justice [[Samuel Alito]] for a clerkship.<ref name="supreme conflict"/> He retired in 1993, during [[Bill Clinton]]'s presidency, saying that "someone else should be permitted to have a like experience."<ref name="usa today"/> Clinton appointed Justice [[Ruth Bader Ginsburg]], a judge from the [[Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit]] and a former [[Columbia University]] law professor, to succeed him.


==Later years and death==
==Later years and death==
After retiring from the Supreme Court, White occasionally sat with lower federal courts.<ref name="usa today"/> He maintained chambers in the federal courthouse in Denver until shortly before his death. He also served for the Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals.<ref>[http://www.uscourts.gov/ttb/may02ttb/justicebyron.html Justice Byron R. White] ''The Third Branch''</ref>
After retiring from the Supreme Court, White occasionally sat with lower federal courts.<ref name="usa today" /> He maintained chambers in the federal courthouse in Denver until shortly before his death.{{Sfn|Greenhouse|2002}} He also served for the Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.library.unt.edu/gpo/csafca/Press_Releases/comfinal.htm |title=Appellate Study Commission Issues Final Report |date=December 18, 1998 |website=Library.unt.edu |access-date=June 17, 2017 |archive-date=March 4, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304112713/http://www.library.unt.edu/gpo/csafca/Press_Releases/comfinal.htm |url-status=live }}</ref>


White died on April 15, 2002 at the age of 84. He was the last living [[Warren Court]] Justice, and died the day before the fortieth anniversary of his swearing in as a Justice. From his death until the retirement of [[Sandra Day O'Connor]], there were no living former Justices.<ref name="usa today"/>
White died of [[pneumonia]] on April 15, 2002, at the age of 84.<ref name="dnot">{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=0FFOAAAAIBAJ&sjid=1-wDAAAAIBAJ&pg=7070%2C19130 |work=Deseret News |location=(Salt Lake City, Utah) |agency=Associated Press |last=Gearan |first=Anne |title=Retired U.S. Justice Byron White dies at 84 |date=April 16, 2002 |page=A3 |access-date=June 24, 2022 |archive-date=June 24, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220624182128/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=0FFOAAAAIBAJ&sjid=1-wDAAAAIBAJ&pg=7070,19130 |url-status=live }}</ref> He was the last living Justice to have served on the [[Warren Court]],{{Sfn|Greenhouse|2002}}{{Sfn|Stone|2020|p=1026}} and the last justice appointed by Kennedy;{{Sfn|Tomlins|2005|p=327}} he died the day before the fortieth anniversary of his swearing in as a Justice. From his death until the retirement of [[Sandra Day O'Connor]] in 2006, there were no living former justices.<ref name="usa today" />


His remains are interred at All Souls Walk at the [[Cathedral of St. John in the Wilderness, Denver|St. John's Cathedral]] in Denver.<ref>Christensen, George A., ''Here Lies the Supreme Court: Revisited'', ''Journal of Supreme Court History'', Volume 33 Issue 1, Pages 17 – 41 (February 19, 2008), [[University of Alabama]].</ref><ref>{{Find a Grave|6362791}}</ref>
His remains are interred at All Souls Walk at [[Cathedral of St. John in the Wilderness, Denver|St. John's Cathedral]] in Denver.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Christensen |first=George A. |title=Here Lies the Supreme Court: Revisited |journal=Journal of Supreme Court History |volume=33 |issue=1 |pages=17–41 |year=2008 |doi=10.1111/j.1540-5818.2008.00177.x |s2cid=145227968 }}</ref>


Then-Chief Justice Rehnquist said White "came as close as anyone I have known to meriting [[Matthew Arnold]]'s description of [[Sophocles]]: 'He saw life steadily and he saw it whole.' All of us who served with him will miss him."<ref name="usa today"/>
Then-Chief Justice Rehnquist said White "came as close as anyone I have known to meriting [[Matthew Arnold]]'s description of [[Sophocles]]: 'He saw life steadily and he saw it whole.' All of us who served with him will miss him."<ref>[https://www.supremecourt.gov/publicinfo/speeches/sp_04-16-02.html Remarks of the Chief Justice from the Bench on Justice Byron R. White] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220104202616/https://www.supremecourt.gov/publicinfo/speeches/sp_04-16-02.html |date=January 4, 2022 }} by William Rehnquist, ''supremecourt.gov'', April 16, 2002</ref>

==Personal life==
White first met his wife Marion Stearns (1921–2009), the daughter of the president of the University of Colorado, when she was in high school and he was a college football player.<ref name="Marion White">{{Cite news |last=Culver |first=Virginia |date=January 22, 2009 |title=Marion White, wife of late justice, dies at 87 |work=[[The Denver Post]] |url=http://www.denverpost.com/ci_11528947 |url-status=live |access-date=September 22, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150608075305/http://www.denverpost.com/ci_11528947 |archive-date=June 8, 2015}}</ref> During World War II, Marion served in the [[WAVES]] while her future husband was a Navy intelligence officer. They married in 1946 and had two children: a son named Charles Byron (Barney) and a daughter named Nancy.<ref name="usa today" />

His older brother Clayton Samuel "Sam" White (1912–2004) was also a high school valedictorian and Rhodes Scholar. He later became a [[physician]] and medical researcher, particularly on the effects of atomic bomb blasts.<ref name="swabresny" />


==Awards and honors==
==Awards and honors==
The NFL Players Association gives the Byron "Whizzer" White award to one NFL player each year for his charity work. [[Michael McCrary]], who was involved in ''Runyon v. McCrary'', grew up to be a professional football player and won the Byron "Whizzer" White award in 2001.
The NFL Players Association gives the [[Byron "Whizzer" White NFL Man of the Year Award]] to one player each year for his charity work. [[Michael McCrary]], who was involved in ''[[Runyon v. McCrary]]'', grew up to be a professional football player and won the award in 2000.
{| class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#b0c4de; width:20em;" cellspacing="5"
| style="text-align: left;" |Of all the athletes I have known in my lifetime, I'd have to say Whizzer White came as close to anyone to giving 100 percent of himself when he was in competition.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Tagliabue |first=Paul |year=2003 |title=A Tribute to Byron White |url=https://www.questia.com/googleScholar.qst;jsessionid=LJHd2V1286LRkBzwPPf8FpCdCB666T2Z0gDNh28Gr8Ys9Fc2GYph!-1659539997!-1970812899?docId=5001918990 |url-status=live |journal=[[Yale Law Journal]] |publisher=[[Yale University]] |volume=112 |issue=5 |pages=999–1009 |doi=10.2307/3657514 |jstor=3657514 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604124913/http://www.questia.com/googleScholar.qst;jsessionid=LJHd2V1286LRkBzwPPf8FpCdCB666T2Z0gDNh28Gr8Ys9Fc2GYph!-1659539997!-1970812899?docId=5001918990 |archive-date=June 4, 2011 |access-date=August 25, 2017}}</ref>
|-
| style="text-align: right;" | — Pittsburgh Pirates owner<br />[[Art Rooney]]
|}


The federal courthouse in Denver that houses the [[United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit|Tenth Circuit]] is named after White.
The [[Byron White United States Courthouse|federal courthouse]] in Denver that houses the [[United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit|Tenth Circuit]] is named after White.


White was elected to the [[College Football Hall of Fame]] in 1952.{{Sfn|Hutchinson|1998|p=228}}
White was posthumously awarded the [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]] in 2003 by President [[George W. Bush]].<ref>[http://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/two_column_table/Presidential_Medal_of_Freedom_Recipients.htm Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipients], retrieved July 30, 2009 </ref>


White was made an honorary fellow of [[Hertford College, Oxford]].<ref>{{cite web |title=The Hertford College Magazine |url=https://www.hertford.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/1991-No.-77-The-Hertford-College-Magazine.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220115042210/https://www.hertford.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/1991-No.-77-The-Hertford-College-Magazine.pdf |access-date=8 January 2023 |website=Hertford College |archive-date=January 15, 2022 }}</ref>
White was inducted into the [[Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference]] Hall of Fame on July 14, 2007,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://buffzone.com/news/2007/feb/25/rmac-to-honor-whizzer/ |title=RMAC to honor 'Whizzer' |publisher=CUBuffs.com |date=February 25, 2007 |accessdate=February 25, 2007 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20071226043808/http://buffzone.com/news/2007/feb/25/rmac-to-honor-whizzer/ <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = December 26, 2007}}</ref> in addition to being a member of the College Football Hall of Fame.


White was posthumously awarded the [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]] in 2003 by President [[George W. Bush]].<ref>[https://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/two_column_table/Presidential_Medal_of_Freedom_Recipients.htm Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipients] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040714130038/http://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/two_column_table/Presidential_Medal_of_Freedom_Recipients.htm |date=July 14, 2004 }}, retrieved July 30, 2009</ref>
One of White's former law clerks, [[Dennis J. Hutchinson]], wrote an unofficial biography of him called ''The Man Who Once was Whizzer White''.<ref>Oxford Oxfordshire: [[Oxford University Press]], 1998. ISBN 0-684-82794-8; ISBN 978-0-684-82794-0</ref>

White was inducted into the [[Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference]] Hall of Fame on July 14, 2007,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://buffzone.com/news/2007/feb/25/rmac-to-honor-whizzer/ |title=RMAC to honor 'Whizzer' |publisher=CUBuffs.com |date=February 25, 2007 |access-date=February 25, 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071226043808/http://buffzone.com/news/2007/feb/25/rmac-to-honor-whizzer/ <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archive-date = December 26, 2007}}</ref> in addition to being a member of the College Football Hall of Fame and the University of Colorado's Athletic Hall of Fame, where he is enshrined as "The Greatest Buff Ever".<ref>{{cite web|title=CU Athletic Hall of Fame — Justice Byron White|url=http://www.cubuffs.com/ViewArticle.dbml?ATCLID=921485|publisher=[[Colorado Buffaloes|University of Colorado (Boulder) Athletic Department]]|access-date=September 22, 2014|archive-date=March 18, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150318093103/http://www.cubuffs.com/ViewArticle.dbml?ATCLID=921485|url-status=live}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal box|Biography|World War II|United States}}
{{Portal|Biography|United States}}
* [[Demographics of the Supreme Court of the United States]]
{{multicol}}
*[[Demographics of the Supreme Court of the United States]]
* [[John F. Kennedy Supreme Court candidates]]
*[[John F. Kennedy Supreme Court candidates]]
* [[List of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States]]
*[[List of Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States by court composition]]
* [[List of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States by court composition]]
*[[List of Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States by education]]
* [[List of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States (Chief Justice)]]
*[[List of Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States by time in office]]
* [[List of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States (Seat 6)]]
*[[List of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States]]
* [[List of NCAA major college football yearly rushing leaders]]
* [[List of NCAA major college football yearly scoring leaders]]
{{multicol-break}}
*[[List of United States Chief Justices by time in office]]
* [[List of NCAA major college football yearly total offense leaders]]
*[[List of Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States]]
* [[List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Burger Court]]
*[[List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Burger Court|United States Supreme Court cases during the Burger Court]]
* [[List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Rehnquist Court]]
* [[List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Warren Court]]
*[[List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Rehnquist Court|United States Supreme Court cases during the Rehnquist Court]]
* [[List of United States Supreme Court justices by time in office]]
*[[List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Warren Court|United States Supreme Court cases during the Warren Court]]
* [[List of United States federal judges by longevity of service]]

{{multicol-end}}
== Footnotes ==
<references group="note"></references>


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|2}}
{{Reflist|30em}}

=== Sources ===

==== Books ====
* {{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gcATAAAAIAAJ |title=Eighty-Seventh Congress Second Session on Nomination of Byron R. White, of Colorado, to be Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States |publisher=[[U.S. Government Printing Office]] |year=1962 |location=Washington, D.C. |ref={{harvid|Hearing before the Committee on the Judiciary|1962}}}}
* {{Cite book |last=Hutchinson |first=Dennis J. |title=The Man Who Once Was Whizzer White: A Portrait of Justice Byron White |publisher=[[Free Press (publisher)|Free Press]] |year=1998 |isbn=9780684827940 |location=New York |author-link=Dennis J. Hutchinson}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Schaeper |first1=Thomas J. |title=Rhodes Scholars, Oxford, and the Creation of an American Elite |last2=Schaeper |first2=Kathleen |publisher=[[Berghahn Books]] |year=2010 |isbn=978-1845457211}}
* {{Cite book |last=Tomlins |first=Christopher L. |title=The United States Supreme Court: The Pursuit of Justice |publisher=[[Houghton Mifflin]] |year=2005 |isbn=9780618329694 |location=Boston}}
* {{Cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/justicesofunited0004unse_a6q5 |title=The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions |publisher=Facts On File, Inc. |year=2013 |isbn=978-0791013779 |editor-last=Friedman |editor-first=Leon |edition=4th |location=New York, NY |editor-last2=Israel |editor-first2=Fred L.}}

==== Journals ====
* {{Cite journal |last=Rehnquist |first=William H. |author-link=William Rehnquist |date=October 1993 |title=A Tribute to Justice Byron R. White |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=103 |issue=1 |pages=1–3 |jstor=797072}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Oberdorfer |first=Louis F. |author-link=Louis F. Oberdorfer |date=October 1993 |title=Justice White and the Yale Legal Realists |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=103 |issue=1 |pages=5–17 |jstor=797073}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Stith |first=Kate |date=October 1993 |title=Byron R. White, Last of the New Deal Liberals |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=103 |issue=1 |pages=19–35 |jstor=797074}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Starr |first=Kenneth W. |author-link=Ken Starr |date=October 1993 |title=Justice Byron R. White: The Last New Dealer |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=103 |issue=1 |pages=37–41 |jstor=797075}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Hutchinson |first=Dennis J. |author-link=Dennis J. Hutchinson |date=October 1993 |title=The Man Who Once Was Whizzer White |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=103 |issue=1 |pages=43–56 |jstor=797076}}
* {{Cite journal |last1=Powell Jr. |first1=Lewis F. |author-link=Lewis F. Powell Jr. |last2=Barksdale |first2=Rhesa H. |last3=Ebel |first3=David M. |last4=Liebman |first4=Lance |last5=Fried |first5=Charles |date=November 1993 |title=A Tribute to Justice Byron R. White |journal=[[Harvard Law Review]] |volume=107 |issue=1 |pages=1–26 |jstor=1341911}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Stevens |first=John Paul |author-link=John Paul Stevens |date=May 1, 1994 |title=Cheers! A Tribute to Justice Byron R. White |url=https://digitalcommons.law.byu.edu/lawreview/vol1994/iss2/1 |journal=[[Brigham Young University Law Review]] |volume=1994 |issue=2 |pages=209–226}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Rehnquist |first=William H. |author-link=William Rehnquist |date=October 2002 |title=Tribute to Justice Byron R. White |journal=[[Stanford Law Review]] |volume=55 |issue=1 |page=1 |jstor=1229584}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Ginsburg |first=Ruth Bader |author-link=Ruth Bader Ginsburg |date=October 2002 |title=Statement on the Death of Justice Byron R. White |journal=[[Stanford Law Review]] |volume=55 |issue=1 |pages=3–4 |jstor=1229585}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Ebel |first=David M. |date=October 2002 |title=Justice Byron R. White: The Legend and the Man |journal=[[Stanford Law Review]] |volume=55 |issue=1 |pages=5–11 |jstor=1229586}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Katzenbach |first=Nicholas deB. |author-link=Nicholas deB. Katzenbach |date=October 2002 |title=Byron White |journal=[[Stanford Law Review]] |volume=55 |issue=1 |pages=13–17 |jstor=1229587}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Campbell |first=Tom |date=October 2002 |title=Justice Byron R. White: A Man of Will |journal=[[Stanford Law Review]] |volume=55 |issue=1 |pages=19–20 |jstor=1229588}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Frederick |first=David C. |date=October 2002 |title=Justice White and the Virtues of Modesty |journal=[[Stanford Law Review]] |volume=55 |issue=1 |pages=21–27 |jstor=1229589}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Sullivan |first=J. Thomas |date=2002 |title=Justice White's Principled Passion for Consistency |url=https://lawrepository.ualr.edu/appellatepracticeprocess/vol4/iss1/5 |journal=The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process |volume=4 |issue=1 |pages=79–87}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Stevens |first=John Paul |author-link=John Paul Stevens |date=March 2003 |title=A Tribute to Justice Byron R. White |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=112 |issue=5 |pages=969–972 |doi=10.2307/3657508 |jstor=3657508 |url=https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/ylj/vol112/iss5/1}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Kennedy |first=Edward M. |date=March 2003 |title=The Unforgettable Byron White |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=112 |issue=5 |pages=973–974 |doi=10.2307/3657509 |jstor=3657509|url=https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/ylj/vol112/iss5/2 }}
* {{Cite journal |last=Collins |first=Richard B. |date=March 2003 |title=Western Justice |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=112 |issue=5 |pages=975–982 |doi=10.2307/3657510 |jstor=3657510}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Hutchinson |first=Dennis J. |author-link=Dennis J. Hutchinson |date=March 2003 |title=Credos |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=112 |issue=5 |pages=983–986 |doi=10.2307/3657511 |jstor=3657511}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Marshall |first=Burke |date=March 2003 |title=Byron White, Lawyer |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=112 |issue=5 |pages=987–991 |doi=10.2307/3657512 |jstor=3657512}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Stith |first=Kate |date=March 2003 |title=Justice White and the Law |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=112 |issue=5 |pages=993–997 |doi=10.2307/3657513 |jstor=3657513}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Tagliabue |first=Paul |date=March 2003 |title=A Tribute to Byron White |journal=[[The Yale Law Journal]] |volume=112 |issue=5 |pages=999–1009 |doi=10.2307/3657514 |jstor=3657514}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Irish |first=Leon E. |date=Summer 2003 |title=Byron White: A Singular Life |url=https://scholarship.law.edu/lawreview/vol52/iss4/3 |journal=Catholic University Law Review |volume=52 |issue=4}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Liebman |first=Lance M. |date=Summer 2003 |title=Reflections on the Life and Work of Justice Byron R. White |url=https://scholarship.law.edu/lawreview/vol52/iss4/4 |journal=Catholic University Law Review |volume=52 |issue=4}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Hutchinson |first=Dennis J. |author-link=Dennis J. Hutchinson |date=2003 |title=Two Cheers for Judicial Restraint: Justice White and the Role of the Supreme Court |url=https://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2532&context=journal_articles |journal=[[University of Colorado Law Review]] |volume=74 |issue=1409 |pages=1409–1423}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Stone |first=Geoffrey R. |author-link=Geoffrey R. Stone |date=January 10, 2020 |title=A Four-Decade Perspective on Life Inside the Supreme Court |journal=[[Harvard Law Review]] |volume=133 |issue=3}}

==== Newspapers ====
* {{Cite news |last=Greenhouse |first=Linda |author-link=Linda Greenhouse |date=April 16, 2002 |title=Byron R. White, Longtime Justice And a Football Legend, Dies at 84 |work=[[The New York Times]] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/04/16/us/byron-r-white-longtime-justice-and-a-football-legend-dies-at-84.html |access-date=9 January 2022 |issn=0362-4331}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
*{{Cite book|last=Abraham |first=Henry J. |title=Justices and Presidents: A Political History of Appointments to the Supreme Court |edition=3rd |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1992 |location=New York |isbn=0-19-506557-3 }}
* {{Cite book|last=Abraham |first=Henry J. |title=Justices and Presidents: A Political History of Appointments to the Supreme Court |url=https://archive.org/details/justicespresiden0000abra |url-access=registration |edition=3rd |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1992 |location=New York |isbn=0-19-506557-3 }}
*{{Cite book|last=Cushman |first=Clare |title=The Supreme Court Justices: Illustrated Biographies, 1789–1995 |edition=2nd |publisher=(Supreme Court Historical Society, Congressional Quarterly Books) |year=2001 |isbn=1568021267}}
* {{Cite book|last=Cushman |first=Clare |title=The Supreme Court Justices: Illustrated Biographies, 1789–1995 |edition=2nd |publisher=(Supreme Court Historical Society, Congressional Quarterly Books) |year=2001 |isbn=1-56802-126-7}}
*{{Cite book|last=Frank |first=John P. |editor-last=Friedman |editor-first=Leon |editor2-last=Israel |editor2-first=Fred L. |title=The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions |publisher=Chelsea House Publishers |year=1995 |isbn=0791013774}}
* {{Cite book |last=Frank |first=John P. |editor-last=Friedman |editor-first=Leon |editor2-last=Israel |editor2-first=Fred L. |title=The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions |publisher=Chelsea House Publishers |year=1995 |isbn=0-7910-1377-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/justicesofunited0000unse }}
*{{Cite book|editor-last=Hall |editor-first=Kermit L. |title=The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1992 |location=New York |isbn=0195058356 }}
* {{Cite book |editor-last=Hall |editor-first=Kermit L. |title=The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1992 |location=New York |isbn=0-19-505835-6 |url=https://archive.org/details/oxfordcompaniont00hall }}
*{{Cite book|last=Martin |first=Fenton S. |coauthor=Goehlert, Robert U. |title=The U.S. Supreme Court: A Bibliography |publisher=Congressional Quarterly Books |year=1990 |location=Washington, D.C. |isbn=0871875543 }}
* {{Cite book |last=Martin |first=Fenton S. |author2=Goehlert, Robert U. |title=The U.S. Supreme Court: A Bibliography |publisher=Congressional Quarterly Books |year=1990 |location=Washington, D.C. |isbn=0-87187-554-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/ussupremecourtbi0000mart }}
*{{Cite book|last=Urofsky |first=Melvin I. |title=The Supreme Court Justices: A Biographical Dictionary |publisher=Garland Publishing |year=1994 |location=New York |pages=590 |isbn=0815311761 }}
* {{Cite book |last=Urofsky |first=Melvin I. |title=The Supreme Court Justices: A Biographical Dictionary |publisher=Garland Publishing |year=1994 |location=New York |page=590 |isbn=0-8153-1176-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/supremecourtjust00melv |url-access=registration }}
*[[Bob Woodward|Woodward, Robert]] and [[Scott Armstrong (journalist)|Armstrong, Scott]]. ''[[The Brethren (non-fiction)|The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court]]'' (1979). ISBN 978-0-380-52183-8; ISBN 0-380-52183-0. ISBN 978-0-671-24110-0; ISBN 0-671-24110-9; ISBN 0-7432-7402-4; ISBN 978-0-7432-7402-9.
* [[Bob Woodward|Woodward, Robert]] and [[Scott Armstrong (journalist)|Armstrong, Scott]]. ''[[The Brethren (non-fiction)|The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court]]'' (1979). {{ISBN|978-0-380-52183-8}}; {{ISBN|0-380-52183-0}}. {{ISBN|978-0-671-24110-0}}; {{ISBN|0-671-24110-9}}; {{ISBN|0-7432-7402-4}}; {{ISBN|978-0-7432-7402-9}}.


==External links==
==External links==
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Commons|Byron White}}
{{Commons|Byron White}}
{{wikisource-author|Byron White}}
{{wikisource author}}
* [https://www.fjc.gov/history/judges/white-byron-raymond Byron White] at the ''[[Biographical Directory of Federal Judges]]'', a [[public domain]] publication of the [[Federal Judicial Center]].
*[http://www.oyez.org/justices/byron_r_white/ Oyez Project, U.S. Supreme Court media, Byron R. White.]
*[http://www.supremecourthistory.org/02_history/subs_timeline/images_associates/079.html Bryon R. White,] [[Supreme Court Historical Society]].
* [https://www.oyez.org/justices/byron_r_white/ Oyez Project, U.S. Supreme Court media, Byron R. White]
*{{Find a Grave|6362791}}
* {{C-SPAN|7271}}
* [http://www.steelersuk.com/history/thirties/Byron%20White%201.html Byron White's season with the 1938 Pittsburgh Pirates]
* [http://www.cubuffs.com/hof.aspx?hof=1 University of Colorado Athletics Hall of Fame] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161024152318/http://www.cubuffs.com/hof.aspx?hof=1 |date=October 24, 2016 }} – Byron White
* [http://www.c-span.org/video/?301742-1/byron-white-supreme-court C-SPAN] – Life of Byron White, discussed by [[Dennis J. Hutchinson|Dennis Hutchinson]] (2011)
* {{Find a Grave|6362791}}


{{S-start}}
{{s-start}}
{{S-legal}}
{{s-legal}}
{{s-bef|before=[[Lawrence Walsh]]}}
{{U.S. Secretary box
{{s-ttl|title=[[United States Deputy Attorney General]]|years=1961–1962}}
| before = [[Lawrence Edward Walsh|Lawrence E. Walsh]]
| after = [[Nicholas Katzenbach]]
{{s-aft|after=[[Nicholas Katzenbach|Nick Katzenbach]]}}
{{s-break}}
| years = 1961–1962
{{s-bef|before=[[Charles Evans Whittaker|Charles Whittaker]]}}
| president = [[John F. Kennedy]]
{{s-ttl|title=[[Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States]]|years=1962–1993}}
| department = Deputy Attorney General}}
{{s-aft|after=[[Ruth Bader Ginsburg]]}}
{{Succession box|title=[[List of Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States|Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States]]|years=April 12, 1962&nbsp;– June 28, 1993|after=[[Ruth Bader Ginsburg]]|before=[[Charles Evans Whittaker]]}}
{{S-end}}
{{s-end}}


{{SCOTUS Justices}}
{{Start U.S. Supreme Court composition|CJ=[[Earl Warren|Warren]]}}
{{Navboxes
{{U.S. Supreme Court composition court lifespan| cj=Earl Warren|years=1953–1969}}
| title = Byron White's football career
{{U.S. Supreme Court composition 1962-1965}}
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{{U.S. Supreme Court composition 1967-1969}}
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{{U.S. Supreme Court composition CJ|CJ=[[Warren E. Burger|Burger]]}}
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{{U.S. Supreme Court composition CJ|CJ=[[William Rehnquist|Rehnquist]]}}
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{{NFL1940s}}{{NFL Alumni Career Achievement Award}}{{NCAA Theodore Roosevelt Award}}{{National Football Foundation Gold Medal Winners}}
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{{Persondata
|NAME= White, Byron Raymond
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION= [[Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States|Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court]], [[American football|football]] [[running back]]
|DATE OF BIRTH= 1917-06-08
|PLACE OF BIRTH= [[Fort Collins, Colorado|Fort Collins]], Colorado, United States
|DATE OF DEATH= 2002-04-15
|PLACE OF DEATH= [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]], Colorado, United States}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:White, Byron}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:White, Byron}}
[[Category:1917 births]]
[[Category:2002 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century American judges]]
[[Category:Alumni of Hertford College, Oxford]]
[[Category:Alumni of Hertford College, Oxford]]
[[Category:American athlete-politicians]]
[[Category:All-American college football players]]
[[Category:American Rhodes scholars]]
[[Category:American Rhodes Scholars]]
[[Category:American Episcopalians]]
[[Category:American Episcopalians]]
[[Category:American football running backs]]
[[Category:American football halfbacks]]
[[Category:American military personnel of World War II]]
[[Category:American men's basketball players]]
[[Category:Colorado Buffaloes men's basketball players]]
[[Category:Basketball players from Denver]]
[[Category:Colorado Buffaloes football players]]
[[Category:College Football Hall of Fame inductees]]
[[Category:College Football Hall of Fame inductees]]
[[Category:University of Colorado at Boulder alumni]]
[[Category:Colorado Buffaloes football players]]
[[Category:Yale Law School alumni]]
[[Category:Colorado Buffaloes men's basketball players]]
[[Category:Colorado lawyers]]
[[Category:Colorado Democrats]]
[[Category:Deaths from pneumonia in Colorado]]
[[Category:Detroit Lions players]]
[[Category:Detroit Lions players]]
[[Category:National Football League players with multiple rushing titles]]
[[Category:Law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States]]
[[Category:People from Denver, Colorado]]
[[Category:Lawyers from Denver]]
[[Category:People from Fort Collins, Colorado]]
[[Category:Military personnel from Colorado]]
[[Category:Pittsburgh Pirates (football) players]]
[[Category:Pittsburgh Pirates (football) players]]
[[Category:Pittsburgh Steelers players]]
[[Category:Pittsburgh Steelers players]]
[[Category:Players of American football from Denver]]
[[Category:Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients]]
[[Category:Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients]]
[[Category:United States Navy officers]]
[[Category:Sportspeople from Fort Collins, Colorado]]
[[Category:United States Deputy Attorneys General]]
[[Category:United States deputy attorneys general]]
[[Category:United States Supreme Court justices]]
[[Category:United States federal judges appointed by John F. Kennedy]]
[[Category:United States federal judges appointed by John F. Kennedy]]
[[Category:Law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States]]
[[Category:United States Navy officers]]
[[Category:1917 births]]
[[Category:United States Navy personnel of World War II]]
[[Category:2002 deaths]]
[[Category:Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States]]
[[Category:University of Colorado alumni]]

[[Category:Yale Law School alumni]]
[[de:Byron White]]
[[Category:20th-century American sportsmen]]
[[he:ביירון וייט]]
[[zh:拜倫·懷特]]

Latest revision as of 10:42, 1 January 2025

Byron White
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
In office
April 16, 1962 – June 28, 1993
Nominated byJohn F. Kennedy
Preceded byCharles Evans Whittaker
Succeeded byRuth Bader Ginsburg
6th United States Deputy Attorney General
In office
January 20, 1961 – April 12, 1962
PresidentJohn F. Kennedy
Preceded byLawrence Walsh
Succeeded byNicholas Katzenbach
Personal details
Born
Byron Raymond White

(1917-06-08)June 8, 1917
Fort Collins, Colorado, U.S.
DiedApril 15, 2002(2002-04-15) (aged 84)
Denver, Colorado, U.S.
Resting placeSaint John's Cathedral
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
Marion Stearns
(m. 1946)
RelativesClayton Sam White (brother)
EducationUniversity of Colorado Boulder (BA)
Hertford College, Oxford
Yale University (LLB)
Civilian awards Presidential Medal of Freedom (2003)
Signature
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Navy
Years of service1942–1945
Rank Lieutenant Commander
Unit Office of Naval Intelligence
Battles/wars
Military awards Bronze Star (with Bronze Oak Leaf Cluster)

American football career
No. 24, 44
Position:Halfback
Personal information
Height:6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight:187 lb (85 kg)
Career information
High school:Wellington (Colorado)
College:Colorado (1935–1937)
NFL draft:1938 / round: 1 / pick: 4
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Rushing yards:1,321
Rushing average:3.4
Rushing touchdowns:11
Receptions:16
Receiving yards:301
Receiving touchdowns:1
Stats at Pro Football Reference
Other

Byron Raymond "Whizzer" White (June 8, 1917 – April 15, 2002) was an American lawyer, jurist, and professional football player who served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1962 until 1993. By his retirement, he was the Supreme Court's only sitting Democrat and the last-living member of the progressive Warren Court.

Born and raised in a small homestead in Wellington, Colorado, White distinguished himself as a student athlete who came from a background of poor farmhands to become a consensus All-American halfback for the Colorado Buffaloes. After being the runner-up for the Heisman Trophy in 1937, he was selected in the 1938 NFL draft by the Pittsburgh Pirates for the National Football League (NFL). He led the league in rushing yards during his rookie season. White graduated from the University of Colorado Boulder as class valedictorian, attaining a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Oxford University. After World War II forced him to return to the United States, he matriculated at Yale Law School, played for the Detroit Lions in the 1940 and 1941 seasons while still enrolled, and served as an officer for the United States Navy in the Pacific Theatre.

White graduated from law school with honors in 1946 and clerked for Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson. He eschewed work for a white-shoe firm and returned to Colorado in order to enter private practice in Denver as a transactional attorney. Minor work as the Colorado state chair of John F. Kennedy's 1960 presidential campaign led to him being unexpectedly tapped in 1961 for a position as U.S. Deputy Attorney General. He was successfully nominated by Kennedy to the Supreme Court the next year, becoming the Court's first justice from Colorado.

White espoused a pragmatic and non-doctrinaire judicial approach which strengthened the powers of the federal government, advocated for the desegregation of public schools, and upheld the use of affirmative action. Though expected to be a reliably liberal justice, he was by contrast a vociferous opponent of substantive due process, penning dissents in both Miranda v. Arizona and Roe v. Wade. White wrote the majority opinion in Bowers v. Hardwick (upholding the ability for states to restrict homosexual conduct) and dissented in Runyon v. McCrary (against the ability for the government to restrict racial discrimination in private schools) and Planned Parenthood v. Casey. Due to his unwillingness to align with either the liberal or conservative blocs, White was largely oriented with the Court's center.[1]

Early life and education

[edit]

White was born in Fort Collins, Colorado, on June 8, 1917. His father, A. Albert White, managed a local lumber company. His mother, Maude Elizabeth (Burger), was the daughter of German immigrants. He had one older brother, Clayton "Sam" Samuel White. Neither parent graduated high school, which was not unusual for farming communities at the time, but they instilled in their sons a heavy emphasis on education and took active roles in the local community.[2][3] White and his brother were raised in the nearby town of Wellington where they attended the local high school. As a young student, White worked odd jobs to support his family during the town's decline in the 1920s; these included roles in harvesting beets, shoveling coal, and hard construction work among other forms of manual labor. In his junior year, he and his brother rented out land and spent long hours in the fields, during which time White adopted a nearly lifelong habit of smoking.[4]

Sam, four years White's senior, became an accomplished student and athlete that graduated as valedictorian, earning a scholarship to study at the University of Colorado, where he was later elected by the university to become a Rhodes Scholar.[5] Whereas Sam was a gregarious and socially active child, White was described as a taciturn boy who "was very quiet, measuring every single word, showing no emotion, and revealing nothing."[6]

White excelled academically in high school, graduating in 1934 as the class valedictorian with the highest grades in the school's history. He studied diligently in order to attain a scholarship to attend college, later describing his philosophy in Wellington as "do your work and don't be late for dinner."[7] White followed his brother's footsteps in attending the University of Colorado Boulder on the scholarship offered to all Colorado high school valedictorians, intending to go to medical school and major in chemistry.[8][9] Though he joined the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity on campus, he stuck to a strict routine of working and studying with little to no social life.[10] However, he would become a star athlete after playing as an All-American halfback for the Colorado Buffaloes football team,[11] winning a series of victories to become among the most acclaimed players in the country.[12][13]

In 1935, Sam White was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Oxford University. After news of his brother's success became a local sensation, White saw his brother as an inspiration and felt pressured to achieve the scholarship himself.[14] He served as student body president his senior year, switched his major to the humanities, and graduated Phi Beta Kappa and valedictorian from the University of Colorado in 1938 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics.[15][11] In his last year, the Colorado Buffaloes went undefeated,[note 1][20] and White's status as a football star earned him the moniker "Whizzer White" by the student newspaper.[21] After months of study, White also attained the Rhodes Scholarship, deferring it for a year to play professional football before attending Hertford College.[note 2][27][28]

Oxford

[edit]

On January 3, 1939, White departed to England aboard the SS Europa, arriving in Southampton on January 9 harassed by reporters wishing to see a "Yank at Oxford."[29][30][31] Upon moving into Hertford College with the intent of studying law, he befriended the future mathematician George Piranian and was assigned with C. H. S. Fifoot as a tutor.[32] White spent his days at Oxford tirelessly studying from day until night, becoming "the only Rhodes scholar who ever worked fourteen hours a day on his studies."[33] During one Easter vacation, he became acquainted with Joseph P. Kennedy and future U.S. president John F. Kennedy as their father, Joseph Kennedy, was the U.S. ambassador to London.[34] In the period of political upheaval just before the Second World War, Oxford students—Rhodes scholars especially—took an active role in international politics, with many American Rhodes scholars beckoning President Roosevelt to take action against Spanish nationalists. White, however, remained closed in the affairs of politics, rarely speaking out and becoming estranged from other students; he prioritized his studies and physique above all else.[35]

Following the end of a term, White spent a summer vacation touring France and Germany, settling down in Munich in order to study the German language and Roman law. He unexpectedly reunited with John F. Kennedy, who was on his own tour of Europe with Torbert Macdonald, and on one occasion the three were heckled by a mob who recognized their English license plates. As the oncoming war made it impossible for students to continue studying abroad,[36][37] White left the country to return to Oxford in late August 1939, choosing to leave the university in order to continue his legal education at Yale Law School.[38][39]

Law school

[edit]

Upon enrolling at Yale, White continued his previous routine of studying fourteen hours a day, taking breaks only to exercise in the gymnasium where he would frequent the basketball courts, often clashing against Yale halfback Clint Frank in pick-up games. Despite attempts by the New York Giants and other NFL teams to get him to sign back into football, White publicly repudiated his football career, telling a local newspaper that "my football playing days are over. I'm started on a law career."[40]

At the time, Yale was home to a number of legal realists who rebuked Lochner and substantive due process, and were generally scholars with an expertise in legal fields outside of constitutional law.[41] Two of such realists—Myres S. McDougal and Arthur Corbin—had a significant influence on White early in law school.[42] Future justice Potter Stewart, one year ahead of him at the university, remembered White as "a serious-minded, scholarly, and rather taciturn (except when he found himself engaged in lively colloquy with J. W. Moore in his class on Procedure), and extremely likable young man with steel-rimmed eyeglasses."[43]

White earned the highest grades in his first-year class and was subsequently awarded the Edgar M. Cullen Prize, an award given to the highest-achieving first-year student.[43] During the summer, he returned to Colorado and attended summer school at the University of Colorado Law School, got an appendectomy, and became a waiter at his old fraternity.[44] White would turn down an offer to join the editorship of the Yale Law Journal,[45] instead taking a leave of absence to promptly return to professional football as a member of the Detroit Lions.[46][47][48]

Professional football

[edit]

White came into the National Football League with the then-Pirates in the summer of 1938 as a widely-heralded college star.[49] The $15,800 contract he had signed made White the NFL's highest-paid player.[50][51] About his first game, one Pittsburgh journalist said he "looked better as an individual than the Pirates did as a team".[49] Despite leading the NFL in rushing yards in 1938,[52] White did not appear for the 1939 season.[53] He would reappear for the Detroit Lions in 1940 and would again top the world of "postgraduate football" with a league-leading performance.[citation needed]

White played a total of three NFL seasons — 33 games in all.[54] He led the league in rushing twice during that short interval, and was elected the NFL's first team All-Pro right halfback in 1940.[55]

World War II

[edit]

At the end of 1941 Lions season, White returned to Yale to await a call to serve in the U.S. Navy after the Attack on Pearl Harbor; in May 1942, he was assigned to naval intelligence and spent weeks training at Dartmouth College and in New York City.[56] His original intention was to join the Marine Corps, but was kept out due to being colorblind.[11]

In July 1943, White was stationed at Nouméa, New Caledonia, tasked with protecting Guadalcanal and Tulagi; he narrowly missed being assigned with John F. Kennedy, his former acquaintance who had also been stationed at Tulagi before being reassigned to the Russell Islands.[57] During World War II, White served as an intelligence officer in the Navy, and was stationed in the Pacific Theatre.[58][59][60] He wrote the intelligence report on the sinking of future President John F. Kennedy's PT-109.[61] For his service, White was awarded two Bronze Star medals,[11] and was honorably discharged as a lieutenant commander in 1945.[62]

[edit]
Byron White with Robert Kennedy in 1961

After his military service, White returned to Yale Law School, graduating in 1946 ranked first in his class with a Bachelor of Laws degree, magna cum laude, and membership in the Order of the Coif.[63] White served as a law clerk to Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1946 to 1947, then returned to Colorado and entered private practice in Denver with the law firm now known as Davis Graham & Stubbs. This was a time in which the Denver economy flourished, and White rendered legal service to the business community. White was for the most part a transactional attorney; he drafted contracts and advised insolvent companies, and he argued the occasional case in court.[64]

During the 1960 presidential election, White used his status as a football star to aid him as chair of John F. Kennedy's campaign in Colorado. White had first met the candidate when White was a Rhodes scholar and Kennedy's father, Joseph Kennedy, was Ambassador to the Court of St. James's.[11] During the Kennedy administration, White served as United States Deputy Attorney General, the number two man in the Justice Department, under Robert F. Kennedy. He took the lead in protecting the Freedom Riders in 1961, negotiating with Alabama Governor John Malcolm Patterson.[11]

Supreme Court

[edit]

On April 3, 1962, President Kennedy nominated White to be an associate justice of the Supreme Court, succeeding Charles Evans Whittaker.[65] The president said of White—a longtime friend of his—that "he has excelled at everything. And I know that he will excel on the highest court in the land."[11] White was confirmed on April 11, 1962, by a voice vote.[65] He took the judicial oath of office on April 16, 1962, and served until June 28, 1993.[66] His Supreme Court tenure was the fourth-longest of the 20th century.[11]

Upon the request of Vice President-Elect Al Gore, White administered the oath of office on January 20, 1993, to Gore. It was the only time White administered an oath of office to a vice president. During his service on the high court, White wrote 994 opinions. He was fierce in questioning attorneys in court,[11] and his votes and opinions on the bench reflect an ideology that has been notoriously difficult for popular journalists and legal scholars alike to pin down. He was seen as a disappointment by some Kennedy supporters who wished he had joined the more liberal wing of the court in its opinions on Miranda v. Arizona and Roe v. Wade.[27]

White often took a narrow, fact-specific view of cases before the Court and generally refused to make broad pronouncements on constitutional doctrine or adhere to a specific judicial philosophy, preferring what he viewed as a practical approach to the law.[11][27] In the tradition of the New Deal, White frequently supported a broad view and expansion of governmental powers.[11][67] He consistently voted against creating constitutional restrictions on the police, dissenting in the landmark 1966 case Miranda v. Arizona.[11] In that dissent, he said that aggressive police practices enhance the individual rights of law-abiding citizens. His jurisprudence has sometimes been praised for adhering to the doctrine of judicial restraint.[68]

Substantive due process doctrine

[edit]

Frequently a critic of the doctrine of "substantive due process", which involves the judiciary reading substantive content into the term "liberty" in the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment and Fourteenth Amendment, White's first published opinion as a Supreme Court Justice was a joint dissent with Justice Clark in Robinson v. California (1962), foreshadowing his career-long distaste for the doctrine. In Robinson, he criticized the remainder of the Court's unprecedented expansion of the Eighth Amendment's prohibition of "cruel and unusual punishment" to strike down a California law providing for civil commitment of drug addicts. He argued that the Court was "imposing its own philosophical predilections" on the state in this exercise of judicial power, although its historic "allergy to substantive due process" would never permit it to strike down a state's economic regulatory law in such a manner.

In the same vein, he dissented in the controversial 1973 case Roe v. Wade. White voted to strike down a state ban on contraceptives in the 1965 case of Griswold v. Connecticut, although he did not join the majority opinion, which famously asserted a "right of privacy" on the basis of the "penumbras" of the Bill of Rights. White and Justice William Rehnquist were the only dissenters from the Court's decision in Roe, though White's dissent used stronger language, suggesting that Roe was "an exercise in raw judicial power" and criticizing the decision for "interposing a constitutional barrier to state efforts to protect human life." White, who usually adhered firmly to the doctrine of stare decisis, remained a critic of Roe throughout his term on the bench and frequently voted to uphold laws restricting abortion, including in Planned Parenthood v. Casey in 1992.[69]

White explained his general views on the validity of substantive due process at length in his dissent in Moore v. City of East Cleveland (1977):

The Judiciary, including this Court, is the most vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with judge-made constitutional law having little or no cognizable roots in the language or even the design of the Constitution. Realizing that the present construction of the Due Process Clause represents a major judicial gloss on its terms, as well as on the anticipation of the Framers, and that much of the underpinning for the broad, substantive application of the Clause disappeared in the conflict between the Executive and the Judiciary in the 1930s and 1940s, the Court should be extremely reluctant to breathe still further substantive content into the Due Process clause so as to strike down legislation adopted by a State or city to promote its welfare. Whenever the Judiciary does so, it unavoidably pre-empts for itself another part of the governance of the country without express constitutional authority.

White parted company with Rehnquist in strongly supporting the Supreme Court decisions striking down laws that discriminated on the basis of sex, agreeing with Justice William J. Brennan in 1973's Frontiero v. Richardson that such laws should be subject to strict scrutiny. Only three justices joined Brennan's plurality opinion in Frontiero; later gender discrimination cases would be subjected to intermediate scrutiny (see Craig v. Boren). In Rostker v. Goldberg, White joined Brennan and Marshall in dissent arguing that male-only Selective Service registration was unconstitutional.[70]

White wrote the majority opinion in Bowers v. Hardwick (1986), which upheld Georgia's anti-sodomy law against a substantive due process attack:[11]

The Court is most vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with judge-made constitutional law having little or no cognizable roots in the language or design of the Constitution.... There should be, therefore, great resistance to ... redefining the category of rights deemed to be fundamental. Otherwise, the Judiciary necessarily takes to itself further authority to govern the country without express constitutional authority.

White's opinion in Bowers typified his fact-specific, deferential style, treating the issue in that case as presenting only the question of whether homosexuals had a fundamental right to privacy, even though the statute in Bowers potentially applied to heterosexual sodomy.[71] Georgia, however, conceded during oral argument that the law would be inapplicable to married couples under the precedent set forth in Griswold v. Connecticut.[72] A year after White's death, Bowers was overruled in Lawrence v. Texas (2003).

Death penalty

[edit]
Official portrait, 1976

White took a middle course on the issue of the death penalty: he was one of five justices who voted in Furman v. Georgia (1972) to strike down several state capital punishment statutes, voicing concern over the arbitrary way in which the death penalty was administered. The Furman decision ended capital punishment in the U.S. until the court's ruling in Gregg v. Georgia (1976). In that case, White voted to uphold Georgia's new capital punishment law.

White accepted the position that the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution required that all punishments be "proportional" to the crime;[73] thus, in Coker v. Georgia (1977), he wrote the opinion that invalidated the death penalty for rape of a 16-year-old married girl. His first reported Supreme Court decision was a dissent in Robinson v. California (1962), in which he criticized the Court for extending the reach of the Eighth Amendment. In Robinson the Court for the first time expanded the constitutional prohibition of "cruel and unusual punishments" from examining the nature of the punishment imposed and whether it was an uncommon punishment − as, for example, in the cases of flogging, branding, banishment, or electrocution − to deciding whether any punishment at all was appropriate for the defendant's conduct. White said: "If this case involved economic regulation, the present Court's allergy to substantive due process would surely save the statute and prevent the Court from imposing its own philosophical predilections upon state legislatures or Congress." Consistent with his view in Robinson, White thought that imposing the death penalty on minors was constitutional, and he was one of the three dissenters in Thompson v. Oklahoma (1988), a decision that declared that the death penalty as applied to offenders below 16 years of age was unconstitutional as a cruel and unusual punishment.

Abortion

[edit]

Along with Justice William Rehnquist, White dissented in Roe v. Wade (the dissenting decision was in the companion case, Doe v. Bolton), castigating the majority for holding that the U.S. Constitution "values the convenience, whim or caprice of the putative mother more than the life or potential life of the fetus."[74]

Civil rights

[edit]
White swears in Justice Clarence Thomas as Thomas' wife, Virginia Lamp, looks on (1991)

White consistently supported the Court's post-Brown v. Board of Education attempts to fully desegregate public schools, even through the controversial line of forced busing cases.[75] He voted to uphold affirmative action remedies to racial inequality in an education setting in the famous Regents of the University of California v. Bakke case of 1978. Though White voted to uphold federal affirmative action programs in cases such as Metro Broadcasting, Inc. v. FCC, 497 U.S. 547 (1990) (later overruled by Adarand Constructors v. Peña, 515 U.S. 200 (1995)), he voted to strike down an affirmative action plan regarding state contracts in Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co. (1989).

White dissented in Runyon v. McCrary (1976), which held that federal law prohibited private schools from discriminating on the basis of race. He argued that the legislative history of 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (popularly known as the "Ku Klux Klan Act") indicated that the Act was not designed to prohibit private racial discrimination but only state-sponsored racial discrimination (as had been held in the Civil Rights Cases of 1883). White was concerned about the potential far-reaching impact of holding private racial discrimination illegal, which if taken to its logical conclusion might ban many varied forms of voluntary self-segregation, including social and advocacy groups that limited their membership to blacks:[76] "Whether such conduct should be condoned or not, whites and blacks will undoubtedly choose to form a variety of associational relationships pursuant to contracts which exclude members of the other race. Social clubs, black and white, and associations designed to further the interests of blacks or whites are but two examples". Runyon was essentially overruled by 1989's Patterson v. McLean Credit Union, which itself was superseded by the Civil Rights Act of 1991.

Relationships with other justices

[edit]

White said he was most comfortable on Rehnquist's court. He once said of Earl Warren, "I wasn't exactly in his circle."[11] On the Burger Court, the chief justice often assigned important criminal procedure and individual rights opinions to White because of his frequently conservative views on these questions.

Court operations and retirement

[edit]
White (sitting) with other members of the Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals

White frequently urged the Supreme Court to consider cases when federal appeals courts were in conflict on issues of federal law, believing that resolving such was a primary role of the Supreme Court. Thus, White voted to grant certiorari more often than many of his colleagues; he also wrote numerous opinions dissenting from denials of certiorari. After White (along with fellow Justice Harry Blackmun, who also often voted for liberal grants of certiorari) retired, the number of cases heard each session of the Court declined steeply.[77]

White disliked the politics of Supreme Court appointments,[78] but had great faith in representative democracy, responding to complaints about politicians and mediocrity in government with exhortations to "get more involved and help fix it."[79] He retired in 1993, during Bill Clinton's presidency, saying that "someone else should be permitted to have a like experience."[11] When he retired, White had been the only Democrat on the Court.[80] Clinton nominated (and the Senate approved) Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a judge from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and a former Columbia University law professor, to succeed him.

Later years and death

[edit]

After retiring from the Supreme Court, White occasionally sat with lower federal courts.[11] He maintained chambers in the federal courthouse in Denver until shortly before his death.[80] He also served for the Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals.[81]

White died of pneumonia on April 15, 2002, at the age of 84.[82] He was the last living Justice to have served on the Warren Court,[80][83] and the last justice appointed by Kennedy;[84] he died the day before the fortieth anniversary of his swearing in as a Justice. From his death until the retirement of Sandra Day O'Connor in 2006, there were no living former justices.[11]

His remains are interred at All Souls Walk at St. John's Cathedral in Denver.[85]

Then-Chief Justice Rehnquist said White "came as close as anyone I have known to meriting Matthew Arnold's description of Sophocles: 'He saw life steadily and he saw it whole.' All of us who served with him will miss him."[86]

Personal life

[edit]

White first met his wife Marion Stearns (1921–2009), the daughter of the president of the University of Colorado, when she was in high school and he was a college football player.[87] During World War II, Marion served in the WAVES while her future husband was a Navy intelligence officer. They married in 1946 and had two children: a son named Charles Byron (Barney) and a daughter named Nancy.[11]

His older brother Clayton Samuel "Sam" White (1912–2004) was also a high school valedictorian and Rhodes Scholar. He later became a physician and medical researcher, particularly on the effects of atomic bomb blasts.[9]

Awards and honors

[edit]

The NFL Players Association gives the Byron "Whizzer" White NFL Man of the Year Award to one player each year for his charity work. Michael McCrary, who was involved in Runyon v. McCrary, grew up to be a professional football player and won the award in 2000.

Of all the athletes I have known in my lifetime, I'd have to say Whizzer White came as close to anyone to giving 100 percent of himself when he was in competition.[88]
— Pittsburgh Pirates owner
Art Rooney

The federal courthouse in Denver that houses the Tenth Circuit is named after White.

White was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1952.[89]

White was made an honorary fellow of Hertford College, Oxford.[90]

White was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2003 by President George W. Bush.[91]

White was inducted into the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Hall of Fame on July 14, 2007,[92] in addition to being a member of the College Football Hall of Fame and the University of Colorado's Athletic Hall of Fame, where he is enshrined as "The Greatest Buff Ever".[93]

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ As a senior, White led the 1937 Colorado Buffaloes football team to an undefeated 8–0 regular season, but they lost to favored Rice, 28–14 in the Cotton Bowl Classic on New Year's Day.[16] He was the runner-up (behind Yale quarterback Clint Frank) for the Heisman Trophy,[17] and also played basketball and baseball at CU. The basketball team advanced to the finals of the inaugural National Invitation Tournament at Madison Square Garden in March 1938.[18][19]
  2. ^ White originally planned to attend Oxford in 1938 and not play pro football.[22] However, he was selected fourth overall in the 1938 NFL draft, held in December 1937, by the NFL's Pittsburgh Pirates (now Steelers),[11][23] and became a Rhodes Scholar days later.[24] Oxford allowed White to delay his start to early 1939, so he accepted the Pittsburgh offer in August and played the 1938 season in the NFL.[22][25][26] He led the league in rushing as a 21-year-old rookie and was its highest-paid player.[11]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Friedman & Israel 2013, p. 100–101.
  2. ^ Irish 2003, p. 883–884.
  3. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 22–23.
  4. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 18.
  5. ^ Irish 2003, p. 884.
  6. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 21.
  7. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 24.
  8. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 29.
  9. ^ a b Martin, Douglas (May 2, 2004). "Sam White, 91, researcher on effects of A-Bombs, dies". New York Times. (obituary). Archived from the original on December 13, 2017. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
  10. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 29–30.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Joan Biskupic (April 15, 2002). "Ex-Supreme Court Justice Byron White dies". USA Today. Archived from the original on February 12, 2009. Retrieved October 20, 2008.
  12. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 30–31.
  13. ^ Schaeper & Schaeper 2010, p. 96.
  14. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 31–32.
  15. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 37, 43–44, 48.
  16. ^ "Rice wins 28-14; Whizzer White meets Mr. Lain". Chicago Sunday Tribune. Associated Press. January 2, 1938. p. 1, part 2. Archived from the original on July 1, 2016. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
  17. ^ "Clint Frank voted U.S. gridder no. 1". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. December 1, 1937. p. 21.[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ "Colorado, Temple in finals for cage title". Lodi News-Sentinel. California. United Press. March 16, 1938. p. 5. Archived from the original on August 30, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  19. ^ "Temple routs Colorado five, 60-36, in final". Chicago Daily Tribune. Associated Press. March 17, 1938. p. 20. Archived from the original on July 1, 2016. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
  20. ^ Irish 2003, p. 885.
  21. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 39.
  22. ^ a b "Whizzer winds up his career on gridiron". Sunday Spartanburg Herald Journal. South Carolina. Associated Press. December 4, 1938. p. 24. Archived from the original on September 1, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  23. ^ National Football League: NFL Draft History Archived March 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine; see also 1938 NFL draft.
  24. ^ "Whizzer White Rhodes Scholar". Bend Bulletin. Oregon. United Press. December 21, 1937. p. 3. Archived from the original on September 1, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  25. ^ Burcky, Claire M. (August 1, 1938). "'Whizzer' finally decides to play with Pirates". Pittsburgh Press. p. 21. Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  26. ^ "Whizzer White accepts pro grid offer". Lodi News-Sentinel. California. United Press. August 2, 1938. p. 7. Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  27. ^ a b c Christopher L. Tomlins (2005). The United States Supreme Court. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0618329692. Archived from the original on February 10, 2014. Retrieved October 21, 2008.
  28. ^ "College Notes" (PDF). Hertford College Magazine. 48: 1–2. May 1961. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 7, 2022. Retrieved February 7, 2022.
  29. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 124–125.
  30. ^ "Whizzer White leaves Pirates for Oxford, Eng". Reading Eagle. Pennsylvania. United Press. December 28, 1938. p. 14. Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  31. ^ Sell, Jack (December 28, 1938). "Whizzer stops over here on way to Oxford". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 14. Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  32. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 124, 127.
  33. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 129, 133.
  34. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 133.
  35. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 135–136.
  36. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 146.
  37. ^ "Byron White now student at Yale". Daily Times. Beaver and Rochester, Pennsylvania. October 4, 1939. p. 8. Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  38. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 140–141.
  39. ^ "Whizzer White just hides out". Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. Associated Press. October 3, 1939. p. 12. Archived from the original on November 8, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  40. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 147–148.
  41. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 152–153.
  42. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 154–155.
  43. ^ a b Hutchinson 1998, p. 157.
  44. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 156–157.
  45. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 160.
  46. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 158–159.
  47. ^ "Detroit signs "Whizzer" White". St. Petersburg Times. INS. August 20, 1940. p. 10. Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  48. ^ French, Bob (August 27, 1941). "Whizzer White still a student". Toledo Blade. Ohio. p. 22. Archived from the original on August 29, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  49. ^ a b "Football Pirates Shake Off Detroit Lions Bump for Tomorrow's Opener," Pittsburgh Press, Sept. 10, 1938, p. 10.
  50. ^ "The Los Angeles Times 07 Aug 1978, page 3". Newspapers.com. Retrieved January 23, 2023.
  51. ^ Freedman, Lew (2009). "1930s: Getting started". Pittsburgh Steelers: The Complete Illustrated History. United States: MBI Publishing Company LLC. ISBN 9780760336458.
  52. ^ White gained 567 yards on the ground in 1938, leading the league's second best runner, Tuffy Leemans by more than 100 yards. See: Carl L. Storck (ed.), Official Guide of the National Football League 1939. New York: American Sports Publishing Co., 1939; pp. 53–54.
  53. ^ Tod Maher and Bob Gill (eds.), The Pro Football Encyclopedia: The Complete and Definitive Record of Professional Football. New York: Macmillan USA, 1997; p. 842.
  54. ^ Whizzer White Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Draft, College Whizzer White statistics, Pro Football Reference, www.pro-football-reference.com
  55. ^ George Strickler (ed.), Roster and Record Manual 1941. Chicago: National Football League, 1941; p. 68.
  56. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 172.
  57. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 173.
  58. ^ James, Rembert (September 15, 1943). "'Whizzer' White now on PT staff". Deseret News. Salt Lake City, Utah. Associated Press. p. 1. Archived from the original on August 29, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  59. ^ "Navy medal given to Whizzer White". Milwaukee Journal. United Press. June 15, 1944. p. 12, part 2.[permanent dead link]
  60. ^ Alexander, John D. (June 29, 1945). "Whizzer White survives Bunker Hill". Deseret News. Salt Lake City, Utah. INS. p. 12. Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  61. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 175.
  62. ^ Wright, Alfred (December 10, 1962). "A Modest All-America Who Sits on the Highest Bench -". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on October 18, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
  63. ^ Hearing before the Committee on the Judiciary 1962, p. 6, 8.
  64. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 226.
  65. ^ a b "Supreme Court Nominations (1789-Present)". Washington, D.C.: United States Senate. Archived from the original on October 7, 2019. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  66. ^ "Justices 1789 to Present". Washington, D.C.: Supreme Court of the United States. Archived from the original on April 15, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  67. ^ New York v. United States, 488 U.S. 1041 (1992). White, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.
  68. ^ Hutchinson, Dennis (2003). "Two Cheers for Judicial Restraint: Justice White and the Role of the Supreme Court". U. Colo. L. Rev. 74: 1409.
  69. ^ Thornburg v. American Coll. of Obst. & Gyn. 476 U.S. 747 (1986). White, J., dissenting.
  70. ^ White, Byron. "Rostker v. Goldberg". Justia. Archived from the original on April 9, 2022. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
  71. ^ Bowers, 478 U.S. 186, 188, n. 1.
  72. ^ Oral argument of Bowers v. Hardwick, available at Oyez.org, https://www.oyez.org/cases/1980-1989/1985/1985_85_140 Archived September 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  73. ^ Harmelin v. Michigan, 501 U.S. 957 (1991). White, J., dissenting.
  74. ^ Doe v. Bolton, 410 U.S. 179 Archived December 4, 2004, at the Wayback Machine (1973). Findlaw.com. Retrieved September 10, 2011.
  75. ^ (See Milliken v. Bradley (White, J., dissenting)).
  76. ^ See Runyon, 427 U.S. 160, 212 (White, J., dissenting)
  77. ^ See David M. O'Brien, The Rehnquist Court's Shrinking Plenary Docket, 81 Judicature 58–65 (September/October 1997).
  78. ^ Dennis J. Hutchinson, The Man Who Once Was Whizzer White: a Portrait of Justice Byron R. White, (Glencoe, The Free Press, 1998)
  79. ^ David C. Frederick, Justice White and the Virtue of Modesty, 55 Stanford L.Rev. 21, 27 (2002)
  80. ^ a b c Greenhouse 2002.
  81. ^ "Appellate Study Commission Issues Final Report". Library.unt.edu. December 18, 1998. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved June 17, 2017.
  82. ^ Gearan, Anne (April 16, 2002). "Retired U.S. Justice Byron White dies at 84". Deseret News. (Salt Lake City, Utah). Associated Press. p. A3. Archived from the original on June 24, 2022. Retrieved June 24, 2022.
  83. ^ Stone 2020, p. 1026.
  84. ^ Tomlins 2005, p. 327.
  85. ^ Christensen, George A. (2008). "Here Lies the Supreme Court: Revisited". Journal of Supreme Court History. 33 (1): 17–41. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5818.2008.00177.x. S2CID 145227968.
  86. ^ Remarks of the Chief Justice from the Bench on Justice Byron R. White Archived January 4, 2022, at the Wayback Machine by William Rehnquist, supremecourt.gov, April 16, 2002
  87. ^ Culver, Virginia (January 22, 2009). "Marion White, wife of late justice, dies at 87". The Denver Post. Archived from the original on June 8, 2015. Retrieved September 22, 2014.
  88. ^ Tagliabue, Paul (2003). "A Tribute to Byron White". Yale Law Journal. 112 (5). Yale University: 999–1009. doi:10.2307/3657514. JSTOR 3657514. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011. Retrieved August 25, 2017.
  89. ^ Hutchinson 1998, p. 228.
  90. ^ "The Hertford College Magazine" (PDF). Hertford College. Archived (PDF) from the original on January 15, 2022. Retrieved January 8, 2023.
  91. ^ Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipients Archived July 14, 2004, at the Wayback Machine, retrieved July 30, 2009
  92. ^ "RMAC to honor 'Whizzer'". CUBuffs.com. February 25, 2007. Archived from the original on December 26, 2007. Retrieved February 25, 2007.
  93. ^ "CU Athletic Hall of Fame — Justice Byron White". University of Colorado (Boulder) Athletic Department. Archived from the original on March 18, 2015. Retrieved September 22, 2014.

Sources

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Books

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Journals

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Newspapers

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Further reading

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[edit]
Legal offices
Preceded by United States Deputy Attorney General
1961–1962
Succeeded by
Preceded by Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
1962–1993
Succeeded by