Like
many of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention, Luther Martin attended
the College of New Jersey (later Princeton), from which he graduated with honors
in 1766. Though born in Brunswick, NJ., in 1748, Martin moved to Maryland after
receiving his degree and taught there for 3 years. He then began to study the
law and was admitted to the Virginia bar in 1771.
Martin was an early advocate of American independence from Great Britain. In
the fall of 1774 he served on the patriot committee of Somerset County, and in
December he attended a convention of the Province of Maryland in Annapolis,
which had been called to consider the recommendations of the Continental
Congress. Maryland appointed Luther Martin its attorney general in early 1778.
In this capacity, Martin vigorously prosecuted Loyalists, whose numbers were
strong in many areas. Tensions had even led to insurrection and open warfare in
some counties. While still attorney general, Martin joined the Baltimore Light
Dragoons. In July 1781 his unit joined Lafayette's forces near Fredericksburg,
VA., but Martin was recalled by the governor to prosecute a treason trial.
Martin married Maria Cresap on Christmas Day 1783. Of their five children,
three daughters lived to adulthood. His postwar law practice grew to become one
of the largest and most successful in the country. In 1785 Martin was elected to
the Continental Congress, but this appointment was purely honorary. His numerous
public and private duties prevented him from traveling to Philadelphia.
At the Constitutional Convention Martin opposed the idea of a strong central
government. When he arrived on June 9, 1787, he expressed suspicion of the
secrecy rule imposed on the proceedings. He consistently sided with the small
states and voted against the Virginia Plan. On June 27 Martin spoke for more
than 3 hours in opposition to the Virginia Plan's proposal for proportionate
representation in both houses of the legislature. Martin served on the committee
formed to seek a compromise on representation, where he supported the case for
equal numbers of delegates in at least one house. Before the convention closed,
he and another Maryland delegate, John Francis Mercer, walked out.
In an address to the Maryland House of Delegates in 1787 and in numerous
newspaper articles, Martin attacked the proposed new form of government and
continued to fight ratification of the Constitution through 1788. He lamented
the ascension of the national government over the states and condemned what he
saw as unequal representation in Congress. Martin opposed including slaves in
determining representation and believed that the absence of a jury in the
Supreme Court gravely endangered freedom. At the convention, Martin complained,
the aggrandizement of particular states and individuals often had been pursued
more avidly than the welfare of the country. The assumption of the term
"federal" by those who favored a national government also irritated Martin.
Around 1791, however, Martin turned to the Federalist party because of his
animosity toward Thomas Jefferson.
The first years of the 1800s saw Martin as defense counsel in two
controversial national cases. In the first Martin won an acquittal for his close
friend, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase, in his impeachment trial in 1805.
Two years later Martin was one of Aaron Burr's defense lawyers when Burr stood
trial for treason in 1807.
After a record 28 consecutive years as state attorney general, Luther Martin
resigned in December 1805. In 1813 Martin became chief judge of the court of
oyer and terminer for the City and County of Baltimore. He was reappointed
attorney general of Maryland in 1818, and in 1819 he argued Maryland's position
in the landmark Supreme Court case McCulloch v. Maryland. The plaintiff,
represented by Daniel Webster, William Pinckney, and William Wirt, won the
decision, which determined that states could not tax federal institutions.
Martin's fortunes declined dramatically in his last years. Heavy drinking,
illness, and poverty all took their toll. Paralysis, which had struck in 1819,
forced him to retire as Maryland's attorney general in 1822. In 1826, at the age
of 78, Luther Martin died in Aaron Burr's home in New York City and was buried
in an unmarked grave in St. John's churchyard.
Image: Courtesy of The National Portrait Gallery,
Smithsonian Institution