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Bethuel Clinton Farrand Sr.

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Bethuel Clinton Farrand Sr.

Birth
Cayuga, Cayuga County, New York, USA
Death
29 Dec 1901 (aged 81)
Port Huron, St. Clair County, Michigan, USA
Burial
Port Huron, St. Clair County, Michigan, USA Add to Map
Plot
Block J Lot 217
Memorial ID
View Source
Jan 8, 1902, Ann Arbor Courier-Register: FIRST JUDGE B. C. Farrand,
Washtenaw's First Judge of Probate Dead

Bethuel Clinton Farrand of Port Huron died after on illness of less than 10 days. The deceased was born in Cayuga N.Y. Dec. 13, 1820, and was a descendant of Nathaniel Farrand who emigrated from England and settled at Midford, Conn. in 1645. His father was the Hon. Bethuel Farrand, who came to Michigan with is family in 1825 and located in Detroit. A year later the family went to Ann Arbor, where the senior Farrand become the first judge of probate of Washtenaw Co. B. C. Farrand received his early education at Griffin academy, Ann Arbor, and when 19 years old went to Detroit to carry out his cherished purpose of fitting himself for the legal profession. In acquiring his knowledge of the law the young man had a hard struggle for existence, in which all the luxuries and most of the comforts of living were denied him. His courage and self-denial were severely tested, but by perseverance he won battle, and after becoming thoroughly grounded in the law was admitted to practice before the supreme court. Upon being admitted to the bar in 1843 Mr. Farrand settled at Palmer, now St. Clair, but remained there only one year, when he went to Port Huron and had resided there continuously since.
Information provide by contributor: Leta Knauss
Jan 8, 1902, Ann Arbor Courier-Register: FIRST JUDGE B. C. Farrand,
Washtenaw's First Judge of Probate Dead

Bethuel Clinton Farrand of Port Huron died after on illness of less than 10 days. The deceased was born in Cayuga N.Y. Dec. 13, 1820, and was a descendant of Nathaniel Farrand who emigrated from England and settled at Midford, Conn. in 1645. His father was the Hon. Bethuel Farrand, who came to Michigan with is family in 1825 and located in Detroit. A year later the family went to Ann Arbor, where the senior Farrand become the first judge of probate of Washtenaw Co. B. C. Farrand received his early education at Griffin academy, Ann Arbor, and when 19 years old went to Detroit to carry out his cherished purpose of fitting himself for the legal profession. In acquiring his knowledge of the law the young man had a hard struggle for existence, in which all the luxuries and most of the comforts of living were denied him. His courage and self-denial were severely tested, but by perseverance he won battle, and after becoming thoroughly grounded in the law was admitted to practice before the supreme court. Upon being admitted to the bar in 1843 Mr. Farrand settled at Palmer, now St. Clair, but remained there only one year, when he went to Port Huron and had resided there continuously since.
Information provide by contributor: Leta Knauss

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