Elon Farnsworth (Michigan Attorney General)

This article is about the Michigan politician. For the Civil War general, see Elon J. Farnsworth.
Elon Farnsworth
1st and 3rd Chancellor of Michigan
In office
1846–1847
Preceded by Randolph Manning
Succeeded by Office abolished
In office
1836–1842
Preceded by Office created
Succeeded by Randolph Manning
4th Michigan Attorney General
In office
1843–1845
Preceded by Zephaniah Platt
Succeeded by Henry N. Walker
Personal details
Born (1799-02-02)February 2, 1799
Woodstock, Vermont
Died March 24, 1877(1877-03-24) (aged 78)
Detroit, Michigan
Resting place Elmwood Cemetery, Detroit

Elon Farnsworth (February 2, 1799, Woodstock, Vermont March 24, 1877, Detroit) was an American lawyer and politician. He served as both Attorney General and Chancellor of the state of Michigan.

Biography

Elon Farnsworth was born February 2, 1799, in Woodstock, Vermont. His father was a farmer and he was educated in the local schools. He moved to Detroit in 1822 and began studying law in the offices of Solomon Sibley, eventually taking over the business after Sibley was elevated to the bench and his other partner died. He later formed his own firm of Farnsworth & Bates with Asher B. Bates.

He was elected to the Legislative Council of Michigan Territory in 1834 and served one term. When the office of Chancellor was created by the new state constitution of 1835, Farnsworth was appointed to it, and served until 1843. He served briefly again between the 1846 resignation of Randolph Manning and the 1847 abolishment of the Court of Chancery.

He ran as the Democratic nominee for Governor of Michigan in 1839, losing to William Woodbridge. After resigning as Chancellor in 1843, Governor John S. Barry appointed Farnsworth as Attorney General, a position which he held for two years.

Farnsworth served several different terms on the Board of Regents of the University of Michigan. As Chancellor of the state, he was an ex officio regent from 1835 to 1843. He was appointed to the board by the Governor in 1846 and served in that capacity until 1852 (while simultaneously being an ex officio member as Chancellor from 1846-1847). When the Board of Regents became an elected body in 1852, he was elected to the board and served again until 1858. He was influential in the board's selection of Henry Philip Tappan as the first President of the University of Michigan.

He was a Director of the Michigan Central Railroad and President of the Detroit Savings Bank from 1849 until shortly before his death.

He died March 24, 1877, of complications from a long-term kidney disease and is buried at Elmwood Cemetery.

References

Legal offices
New title
Office created
Chancellor of Michigan
18361843
Succeeded by
Randolph Manning
Preceded by
Zephaniah Platt
Michigan Attorney General
18431845
Succeeded by
Henry N. Walker
Preceded by
Randolph Manning
Chancellor of Michigan
18461847
Office abolished
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 08, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.