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The Earle family : Ralph Earle and his descendants

The Earle family : Ralph Earle and his descendants

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272 THE EARLE FAMILY [Seventh I<br />

taught a select school at Salisbury Centre. In the following spring<br />

he entered the law office of the late Judge Charles Gray, of Herki-<br />

mer, where he continued until the spring of 1846, with the exception<br />

of teaching school in the winter months, <strong>and</strong> served as assistant<br />

teacher in the Herkimer Academy, of which <strong>his</strong> brother Robert was<br />

Principal. He then entered the law office of Peckham <strong>and</strong> Colt, the<br />

late Rufus W. Peckham, of the Court of Appeals, being the senior<br />

partner of the firm. In January, 1847, ne was admitted to practice,<br />

<strong>and</strong> immediately opened an office in Herkimer.<br />

His brother Robert studied law in <strong>his</strong> office, was admitted to the<br />

Bar a year later, <strong>and</strong> then taken into copartnership with him under<br />

the firm name of S. & R. Earl, which was so continued until Robert<br />

was elected Judge of the Court of Appeals. For six years afterward<br />

G. W. Smith, formerly Judge of Oneida County, was associated<br />

with him, under the firm name of Earl & Smith, <strong>and</strong> he then took<br />

William C. Prescott as <strong>his</strong> junior partner, reserving to himself the<br />

general direction of the business, <strong>and</strong> t<strong>his</strong> copartnership still con-<br />

tinues.<br />

His first wife was the youngest daughter of Alfred Putnam, for<br />

many years a prominent citizen of Herkimer. His second wife is a<br />

gr<strong>and</strong>daughter of the late Judge Saunders Lansing, who was a<br />

brother of the late Chancellor Lansing, of the State of New York.<br />

In politics Mr. Earl has always been a democrat, active <strong>and</strong> efficient<br />

in all political campaigns, <strong>and</strong> increasing <strong>his</strong> influence by forcible,<br />

pungent <strong>and</strong> able contributions to the columns of the democratic<br />

press. He has been a member of the Democratic County Committee<br />

for ten years, <strong>and</strong> has repeatedly represented the party in State conventions.<br />

He has also twice received the nomination for County<br />

Judge, but the republican majority in the county has been too large<br />

to overcome, even with <strong>his</strong> conceded ability <strong>and</strong> personal popularity.<br />

For many years he has taken a deep interest in the local <strong>and</strong> tra-<br />

ditional <strong>his</strong>tory of the Mohawk Valley, <strong>and</strong> <strong>his</strong> researches in that<br />

direction have been so thorough that perhaps no other living man is<br />

a better authority upon that subject. In 1876 he delivered the Cen-<br />

tennial address at the celebration at Herkimer, which was extensively<br />

published <strong>and</strong> favorably received. Since that time he has delivered<br />

other <strong>his</strong>torical addresses relating to the Valley of the upper Mohawk,<br />

<strong>and</strong> also to the Palatines who were the first settlers in that region.<br />

At several times he has been called upon to address the Oneida

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