Henry T. Backus
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters". Henry Titus Backus (April 4, 1809 – July 13, 1877) was an American politician from the U. S. state of Michigan and judge from the Arizona Territory.
Early life
Backus was born in Norwich, Connecticut, to James and Dorothy Church (Chandler) Backus on April 4, 1809.Template:Sfn He was educated in local schools.Template:Sfn Following graduation he worked briefly as a store clerk before he began reading law under Calvin Goddard and attending lectures at Yale University.Template:Sfn Backus was admitted to the bar in 1833 and practiced for a short time in Norwich before moving to Michigan.Template:Sfn
In Michigan, Backus initially lived in Detroit at the house of his cousin, William Woodbridge. He also formed a law partnership with Woodbridge.Template:Sfn He later became senior partner in the law firm, Backus and Harbough.Template:Sfn Backus married Woodbridge's daughter, Juliana Trumball, on December 7, 1835. The couple had five children, two of which lived to maturity.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Politics
Backus served as a Whig in the Michigan House of Representatives in 1840 and was a member of the state constitutional convention of 1850.Template:Sfn He was Grand Master of Masons in Grand Lodge of Michigan from 1851 to 1853, and later served as alderman from the 9th ward of Detroit from 1860 to 1861.Template:Sfn
In 1860, Backus was elected as a Republican to the Michigan Senate and chosen as president pro tempore of the state senate after Joseph R. Williams became lieutenant governor. After the death of Williams a couple months later on June 15, 1861, Backus became the 15th lieutenant governor of Michigan under Austin Blair until January 1863.
Judicial career
Following the resignation of William Thompson Howell from the Arizona bench, U.S. Senator Jacob M. Howard recommended Backus as a replacement.Template:Sfn The new Associate Justice received his commission on March 11, 1865.Template:Sfn He reached Prescott for the opening of the territorial supreme court's first session on December 26, 1865, and left for his posting in Tucson on January 2, 1866.Template:Sfn While he served faithfully during his four years of office, during his spare time he explored the region including trips to the Colorado River and an 1867 journey into Mexico.Template:Sfn
As his term neared an end, Backus issued a ruling in a pair of cases that had significant impact upon the territory.Template:Sfn The ruling determined that the means of apportionment used by the territory violated the Arizona Organic Act. As a result, the legality of the 3rd, 4th, and 5th Arizona Territorial Legislatures was brought into question. This had the consequence of effectively crippling the territorial government.[1] The issue was not resolved until March 23, 1870, when the United States Congress passed a law confirming the legality of the territorial legislature's actions despite any irregularities that may have occurred.[1]Template:Sfn
Retirement and death
Backus declined to seek reappointment, with his term expiring in 1869.Template:Sfn He held court in April 1869,[2] but it is unclear when he ceased his tenure on the bench. He returned to his private legal practice in Detroit.Template:Sfn In Michigan, he discovered that his health, which included a chronic throat condition, had been helped by the Arizona climate.Template:Sfn In 1875, Backus requested appointment to a position in either Arizona or New Mexico territories but no such posting was available.Template:Sfn He returned to Arizona Territory in March 1877 and stayed at the home of his friend, Charles T. Hayden of Tempe. In addition to making his home in the territory, the former justice planned to use his "ample fortune" to found the territory's first bank in Prescott.Template:Sfn While traveling through Mohave County with Hayden, Backus became ill near the town of Greenwood. Backus died in Greenwood on July 13, 1877.[3] He was initially buried in Greenwood with his remains later moved to Yantic Cemetery in Norwich, Connecticut.Template:Sfn
References
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- 1809 births
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- Justices of the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court
- Arizona Republicans
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- Michigan lawyers
- Delegates to the 1850 Michigan Constitutional Convention
- Detroit City Council members
- Lieutenant governors of Michigan
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- Michigan Republicans
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- Politicians from Norwich, Connecticut
- Yale Law School alumni
- United States federal judges admitted to the practice of law by reading law
- 19th-century American judges
- 19th-century American lawyers
- 19th-century members of the Michigan Legislature