In Roscoe Pound\u27s scathing 1909 review of Law: Its Origin, Growth and Function, American jurist James Coolidge Carter\u27s magnum opus, Pound asserted that Carter\u27s conception of law comes from Savigny through Sir Henry Maine. Frederich Karl von Savigny and Sir Henry Maine were the most prominent representatives of the German and English historical schools of jurisprudence, respectively. For his part, Carter was the leading representative of historical jurisprudence in the United States. Other scholars, following Pound, have similarly linked Carter to Savigny and Maine, especially to the former. Moreover, various authors have noted the great effect these European jurists had on American legal thought in general in the late nineteent...