his first book. Many of his articles also ap- peared in the " Atlantic Monthly." From 1844 till 1848 he was employed in the Boston custom- house. In 1850 he removed to Cambridge, Mass., where he afterward re- sided. He was the au- thor of " Studies in the Field and For- est" (Boston, 1857); " Woods and By- Wavs of New Eng- land " (1872) ; and " Birds and Seasons of JSIew England " (1875). He also edited •• Mount Auburn, its Scenes, its Beauties, and its Lessons." Most of the matter con- tained in the three volumes first men- tioned has been repub-
lished, with some new
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material, under the title " Halcyon Days," " A Year with the Trees," and " A Year with the Birds " (3 vols., Boston, 1881). — His son, Isaac, educator, b. in Beverly, Mass., 7 Sept., 1848, was a student at Phillips An- dover academy, and graduated at Harvard in 1864. After serving as tutor in Greek at Harvard from 1865 till 1869, he studied in the universities of Berlin and Gottingen during 1870-'l. He has since been professor of Greek at Cornell imiver- sity, and has edited " The Hellenic Orations of Demosthenes" (Boston, 1864) and "The Seven Against Thebes of yEschylus " (Boston, 1885).
FLANAGHAN, James Winright, lawyer, b.
in Gordonsville, Va., 5 Sept., 1805. In 1814 his
parents removed to Kentucky, where he received a
limited education, engaged in mercantile pursuits,
and was a justice of the peace for twelve years.
He was a member of the circuit court of Breckin-
ridge county from 1833 till 1843, when he removed
to Harrison county, Kentucky, and after spending
one year settled in Henderson, Rusk co., Texas,
where he was the first to sell merchandise. He
also became interested in cotton-planting. He was
a member of the state house of representatives in
1851-'2, and of the state senate in 1855-'6. In
1857 he was a presidential elector, and a delegate
to the peace congress of 1861. He was a member
of the State constitutional conventions of 1866 and
1868. In 1869 he was elected to congress for the
state at large, and in that year he also held the
office of lieutenant-governor. He was elected to
the U. S. senate as a Republican, serving from 1870
till 1875, and was a member of the committees on
mines and mining, and post-offices, and chairman
of the committee on education and labor. After
his service he retired to his farm near Longview,
Texas, and occasionally appears in court, notwith-
standing his advanced age. He was an " old-line
Whig " before he united with the Republican party.
— His son, Webster, politician, b. in Cloverport,
Breckenridge co., Ky., 9 Jan., 1832, was admitted
to the bar in 1851, and became interested in poli-
tics, holding important local offices. At the begin-
ning of the civil war he was commissioned briga-
dier-general of volunteers in the Confederate ser-
vice. In 1865 he was appointed judge of the 5th
judicial district of Texas. He was elected to the
State constitutional convention in 1869, and two
years afterward became lieutenant-governor of the
state. He was chairman of the delegation to the
Republican convention which met in Philadelphia
in 1873, and served as member of the Texas senate
till 1875, when he represented his district in an-
other constitutional convention, thus assisting in
the formation and adoption of two state constitu-
tions. In 1880 he was a Texas member of the
" Grant guard " at the Chicago convention. The
civil service was brought under discussion, and
when Mr. Barker, from Massachusetts, declared
that certain ones had an " eye to the offices," Mr.
Flanaghan denounced the resolution, and asked,
"What are we here forf " which question was re-
ceived with great applause, and brought him j)rom-
inently into notice for the time. In 1884 he was a
member of the Chicago convention, and supported
Gen. Arthur, who appointed him collector of inter-
nal revenue for the 4th district of Texas in 1884,
which office he held one year. Since then he has
devoted himself to his stock farm, and has intro-
duced fine horses and Jersey cattle into the state.
From 1876 till 1880 he was president of the Hen-
derson and Overton railroad.
FLANDERS, Benjamin Franklin, lawyer, b,
in Bristol, N. H., 26 Jan., 1816; d. near New Or-
leans, La., 13 March, 1896. He was graduated at
Dartmouth in 1842, studied law, and was admitted
to the bar of New Orleans, at the same time devoting
much of his time to teaching in the pxiblic schools
of the city, of which he was for several years the
principal, being finally chosen superintendent in
the 3d municipality, an office which he declined.
He was part proprietor and one of the editors of the
New Orleans " Tropic," a short-lived newspaper.
In 1862 he was compelled to leave New Orleans
for the north because of his devotion to the Union,
but on the capture of that city he returned, and in
the same year the Federal military authorities
made him treasurer of New Orleans. This office
he resigned in a few months, having been elected
a representative to congress, as a Unionist, taking
his seat within a fortnight of its final adjourn-
ment, in March, 1863. In that year Sec. Chase
appointed him supervising special agent of the
treasury department for Louisiana, Mississippi,
and Texas, which place he resigned in 1866. In
June, 1867, Gen. Philip II. Sheridan created him
military governor of Louisiana, superseding J.
Madison Wells, an office which he assumed with-
out inauguration ceremonies, and resigned in six
months. By the choice of Gov. Warinoth, he was
made mayor in May, 1870, and in November fol-
lowing was elected for two years. In 1873 Gen.
Grant appointed him U. S. assistant treasurer in
New Orleans, and this office he held until 1885.
FLANDERS, Henry, lawyer, b. in Plainfield,
Sullivan co., N. H., 13 "Feb.. 1826. He was edu-
cated at Kimball academy and at the seminary in
Newbury, Vt. He studied law, chiefiy with his
father, Charles Flanders, who was graduated at
Harvard in 1808, and a well-known member of the
New Hampshire bar. In 1850 he settled in Phila-
delphia, where he has since practised. He is the
author of a " Treatise on Maritime Law " (Boston,
1852): a " Treatise on the Law of Shipping" (Phila-
delphia, 1853) ; " Chief Justices of the United States
Supreme Court " (1855-8) ; " Memoirs of Cumber-
land " (1856) ; " An Exposition of the Constitution
of the United States " (1860) ; and a " Treatise on
the Principles of Insurance " (1871).
FLANDRAU, Thomas Macomb, physician, b. in New York, 8 July, 1826. His youth was spent in Georgetown. D. C. He studied under George J. Abbott in Washington, and was graduated at the National medical college in Washington in
1848. After practising in Georgetown, he settled in Rome, N. Y., in 1853, making specialties of sur-