HON. LUCIAN C. BLANCHARD.
Hon. Lucian C. Blanchard, who in
public office as a member of the state legislature and on the bench has
been actuated by a spirit of direct and immediate serviceableness, was
born in Diana, Lewis county, New York, a son of Caleb and Penelope
(Aldrich) Blanchard, natives of Rhode Island and Vermont respectively.
The father, born in 1797, removed from New England to New York at an
early period in the development of the latter state and became a
prominent factor in local affairs, serving as supervisor and also as
justice of the peace for many years. Judge Blanchard, born Apri1
15, 1839, was only five years of age at the time of his father's
death. He was educated in the common schools and the Carthage Academy
at Carthage, Jefferson county. New York, and in 1858 came to the middle
west; after which he attended the Rock River Seminary at Mount Morris,
Illinois, for two years. He also engaged in teaching for several years
and in 1860 went to Pike's Peak, attracted by the discovery of gold
there, but in the fall of the same year returned to the Mississippi
valley and taught school in Jasper county, Iowa. He took up the study
of law at Newton, Iowa, and in June, 1862, he enlisted for service
in the Civil war as a member of Company K, Twenty-eighth Regiment of
Iowa Volunteers. With that command he participated in the battles of
Port Gibson, Champion Hill and. the siege of Vicksburg. In his military
service he was active and loyal and with a most creditable record
returned to his home.
Returning to the north Judge
Blanchard resumed the study of law and entered the law department of
the University (if Michigan, from which he was graduated in the class
of 1866. He began practice in Montezuma, Iowa, and soon demonstrated
his capability to successfully handle important litigated interests by
reason of comprehensive know ledge of the principles of law and a
correctness in their application to the points at issue. In the fall of
1868 he was elected circuit judge for a four-years term, was re-elected
in the autumn of 1872 and again in 1876, thus serving for three full
terms or twelve years upon the bench. In a review of the legal history
of the district at that time we find that his decisions indicate strong
mentality, careful analysis, a thorough knowledge of Law and an
unbiased judgment. The judge on the bench fails more frequently perhaps
from a deficiency in that broad mindedness which not only comprehends
the details of a situation quickly and that insures a complete
self-control under even the most exasperating conditions than from any
other cause; and the judge who makes a success in the discharge of his
multitudinous delicate duties is a man of well rounded character.,
finely balanced mind and strong intellectual attainments. That Judge
Blanchard is regarded as such a jurist is a uniformly accepted fact.,
He removed to Oskaloosa in 1874 and following his retirement from the
bench in 1880 continued actively in the practice of law until 1886,
when he spent the summer in Europe.
Natural fitness for
leadership combined with a public recognition of his devotion to the
welfare of county and state led to Judge Blanchard's selection for
representative in the house in 1893 and he served for one term of two
years. In 1895 he was elected senator and was re-elected in 1899,
serving in the twenty-sixth, twenty-seventh, twenty-eighth and
twenty-ninth general assemblies. He took an important part in framing
the legislation enacted during those periods. He served as a member of
the judiciary committee and on a number of other important committees
and he was largely instrumental in securing the passage of a law
prohibiting the eighty per cent insurance clause in fire policies and
was the author of the anti-combine insurance law. In 1900 he was
president of the Iowa State Bar Association and was the candidate of
his party for judge of the supreme court.
He stands high
in Masonic circles, having attained the Knight Templar degree of the
York rite. He was grand treasurer in 1879-80 and grand orator, serving
also for many years as chairman of the committee of
jurisprudence. With Judge Wilson, of Newton, Iowa, he prepared and
published the Masonic Digest and he is a past master in Tri Luminal
lodge at Oskaloosa. He is also a member of the Grand Army of the
Republic and in 1890 was senior vice commander of the department of
Iowa. He is now a member of the Iowa Vicksburg National Commission. He
was a member of the International Congress of St. Louis in 1904 and he
now devotes his attention to the practice of law with the other
interests previously mentioned. His attention, however, is
concentrated chiefly upon his legal business and his practice is
extensive and of an important character.
On the 13th of
January, 1870, occurred the marriage of Judge Blanchard and Miss Sarah
Kilburn, daughter of F. A. Kilburn, of Montezuma, Iowa. To them were
born a daughter and son, Rose and Claude, the former the wife of
Dr. B. O. Jerell, of Oskaloosa. After losing his first wife Judge
Blanchard was married, June 9, 1886, to Jozelle Williams, a daughter of
Micajah T. Williams, of Oskaloosa. Her death occurred April 22,
1897, and Judge Blanchard was married to May Fanner, of Kirksville,
Missouri, September 29, 1904. With a mind of much compass, laudable
ambition and strong and unfaltering determination, Judge Blanchard has
won a position of prominence in his chosen profession, his talents
gaining him prestige as a lawyer at a bar which has numbered many
eminent .and prominent men. Moreover his official record is one that
has reflected honor upon the district that has honored him.