History of the Bench And Bar of New York volume 2

Cover History of the Bench And Bar of New York volume 2
History of the Bench And Bar of New York volume 2
David Mcadam
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Marvin was an in- structor in ethics and political economy in the New York State Re- formatory.
|ARVIN, RICHARD PRATT (born in Fairfield, Herkimer county, New York, December 23, 1803; died in Jamestown, New York, January 11, 1892), was the son of Selden Mar- vin and Charlotte Pratt, and was lineally descended from Reinold Marvin, who came from England about 1030-37 and was a prominent man among the founders of Hartford, Connecticut. 1 Mr. Marvin was reared upon a farm in Dryden, Tompkins county
..., New York, to which his parents had removed from Herkimer county in the winter of 1808-9. He attended the district schools until nineteen years of age, when he began to teach school, also attending the higher public schools and studying Latin with a private tutor. He began the study of law in 1820, at first with (Jeorge W. Scott, of Newark, Wayne county, and subsequently with Mark II. Sibley, of Canan- daigua, and Isaac Seeley, of Cherry Valley. He was admitted to the bar in New York City in May, 1820, as attorney in the Supreme Court and as solicitor in the Court of Chancery, and ten years later, upon the motion of Daniel Webster, was admitted as an attorney and counselor in the Supreme Court of the United States.

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