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of
Williams & Burr. Capen was soon invited into the partnership, which, after the retirement of Burr a short time later, became known as Williams & Capen. Williams died in 1899 and Capen continued practice as a solo practitioner for the next twenty-five years. His firm's most important
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shoot a man dead in the streets of
Lawrence. Appalled by this violence, the Capens returned to New York. The family then moved west a second time, initially settling on a farm near
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on
January 31, 1845, the son of Luman Capen, a direct descendant of Bernard Capen, who was one of the 140 emigrants who left
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before moving into
Bloomington in March 1856. As a boy of twelve, Charles L. Capen attended the founding meeting of the
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Capen had married Ella
Eugenia Briggs in 1875, and together, the couple had two children: Charlotte and Bernard.
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After he graduated from
Harvard, Capen returned to Bloomington, Illinois, where he
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series of events. Shortly after arriving in
Lawrence, Luman Capen saw
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American lawyers admitted to the practice of law by reading law
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Capen graduated from high school in 1865, and then enrolled at
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In addition to practicing law, Capen taught classes at the
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60:in Union Springs. A supporter of the short-lived
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243:Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society
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155:, which it represented for fifty years, and the
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68:, Luman Capen answered the call of the
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181:, serving as its president 1903-1904.
170:, and served for a number of years as
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96:, held in Bloomington, where he heard
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336:Illinois Wesleyan University faculty
52:in 1630. Luman Capen was an ardent
326:People from Cayuga County, New York
291:David Felmley, "Charles L. Capen",
278:David Felmley, "Charles L. Capen",
265:David Felmley, "Charles L. Capen",
241:David Felmley, "Charles L. Capen",
228:David Felmley, "Charles L. Capen",
202:David Felmley, "Charles L. Capen",
72:for abolitionists to settle in the
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106:Illinois State Normal University
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56:and maintained a station of the
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177:Capen was also active in the
30:(1845–1927) was a prominent
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157:Chicago and Alton Railroad
168:Illinois Wesleyan College
153:Illinois Central Railroad
94:Illinois Republican Party
50:Dorchester, Massachusetts
42:Union Springs, New York
331:Harvard College alumni
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98:Lincoln's Lost Speech
90:Bloomington, Illinois
64:, in the wake of the
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341:Illinois Republicans
137:political philosophy
125:James Russell Lowell
58:Underground Railroad
174:of the law school.
66:Kansas–Nebraska Act
28:Charles Laban Capen
113:Harvard University
46:Dorchester, Dorset
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151:clients were the
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16:American lawyer
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54:abolitionist
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316:1927 deaths
311:1845 births
102:high school
305:Categories
191:References
164:law school
133:philosophy
48:to found
148:law firm
144:read law
121:Asa Gray
86:Jim Lane
32:Illinois
146:at the
104:of the
127:, and
35:lawyer
172:dean
135:and
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