Flandrau, Charles Macomb, 1871-1938

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1871
Death 1938

Biographical notes:

Flandrau was an American author.

From the description of Letters to Thomas Boyd, 1922-1929. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 83770781

Charles Eugene Flandrau was born July 15, 1828, in New York City, the son of Thomas Hunt and Elizabeth Maria (Macomb) Flandrau. He was educated in Georgetown, District of Columbia, served as a seaman on several United States revenue cutters, and returned to New York as a veneer-sawyer in a mahogany mill. He returned to Whitesboro, New York, and studied law under his father, being admitted to the bar in 1851. He formed a partnership with his father but in November 1853, migrated to Minnesota Territory in company with Horace R. Bigelow, with whom he formed a law partnership.

Later he settled in Traverse des Sioux in the Minnesota River valley, where he held numerous local offices, was a member of the Minnesota Territorial Council and served in the Constitutional Convention of 1857. In 1856, President Franklin Pierce appointed Flandrau agent to the Dakota Indians. In 1857 President James Buchanan appointed Flandrau as Associate Justice to the Territorial Supreme Court. He continued service on the state Supreme Court until resigning in 1864.

At the beginning of the U.S.-Dakota War in August 1862, Flandrau organized militia units in southwestern Minnesota and was authorized by Governor Alexander Ramsey to have general charge of the southwestern frontier, especially in the defense of New Ulm.

In 1864 he moved to Nevada but shortly returned to Minneapolis and practiced law; in 1870 he moved to St. Paul where he continued his legal practice. Flandrau was a member of the Democratic Party.

Flandrau married Isabella R. Dinsmore of Kentucky on August 10, 1859. She died June 30, 1867, leaving two daughters, Martha Macomb Flandrau (later Mrs. Tilden Russell Selmes) and Sarah Gibson Flandrau (later Mrs. F. W. McCutcheon). On February 28, 1871, Flandrau married Rebecca B. Riddle, daughter of Judge William McClure of Pittsburgh. They had two sons, Charles Macomb Flandrau and William Blair McClure Flandrau.

Flandrau died at his home in St. Paul on September 9, 1903.

From the guide to the Charles Eugene Flandrau and family papers., 1850-1935., (Minnesota Historical Society)

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Subjects:

  • American literature
  • Publishers and publishing
  • Justice, Administration of
  • Dakota Indians
  • Dakota Indians
  • Indians of North America
  • Land grants
  • Law
  • Literature
  • Ojibwa Indians
  • Prices
  • Spirit Lake Massacre, Iowa, 1857

Occupations:

  • Authors
  • Indian agents
  • Lawyers

Places:

  • Minnesota (as recorded)
  • Hutchinson (Minn.) (as recorded)
  • Traverse (Minn.) (as recorded)
  • Leech Lake (Minn.) (as recorded)
  • Europe (as recorded)
  • Nicollet County (Minn.) (as recorded)
  • Saint Peter (Minn.) (as recorded)
  • Dakota Territory. (as recorded)
  • Europe (as recorded)