Behind the simple listing of the name “R. C. Flannigan” in
the news report of his older brother Patrick’s will lies a story studded with
the rugged individualism of one lifting himself by his own bootstraps to high
achievement—or so it might seem. R. C., or Richard Charles as it turned out
after a bit of online research, was most likely born in the humble log cabin
pictured here in Thursday’s post. In a family that claimed him twelve other
siblings in total, he couldn’t escape the reality of the hard work necessary to
survive in Michigan’s Upper
Peninsula.
A biographical sketch puts the scene of his early
educational training in a “pioneer log schoolhouse” in Ontonagon County.
Sometime after the 1870 census—which shows the Flannigan family residing in Greenland Township
in Ontonagon County—the
family moved to Marquette.
There, as one 1911 history records it, young Richard found work as a checking
clerk and bell boy at the scales of the Marquette, Houghton and Ontonagon
Railroad some time after attaining the ripe old age of twelve. He eventually
advanced to a position on the ore docks.
Richard continued his schooling each year after the docks
closed down for the fall. However, his—or the family’s—economic situation must
have required that he shoulder more of his share of the burden, for he sought a
year-round position with his company. There was only one offer made to him. It
was for the position of assistant to an agent in another town, at the monthly
salary of twenty dollars.
This is where serendipity kicks in: someone in a law office
in town offered Richard a position that would enable him to stay at home in Marquette—all at the same
salary as the out-of-town position with the railroad.
Surrounded, in this new job, by all sorts of opportunity for
study, law thankfully became a subject for which he developed an interest. After
four years serving in the law offices of Parkes and Hayden, Richard had
benefited from due diligence in studying the material at hand. He was able to
enter the law department of the University
of Michigan.
Schooling, degree requirements and the plain old burdens of
life being different then than they are now, after one year of study, Richard
ran out of funds and had to return to Marquette.
This didn’t present much of an obstacle to his ambitions, though, for he soon
found a position with another law office in Marquette. When he reached the age of twenty
one, Richard applied to the Circuit Court of Marquette for admission to the bar.
Once his request was granted, Mr. Flannigan began his practice in Marquette, where he remained until 1881, when he relocated
to Norway, Michigan.
I am not sure what prompted that move to Norway, rather
than a return to his family’s home town. However, because
of Richard’s involvement in the legal affairs of both mining interests and
railroads, his proximity to the area of Iron Mountain
may have been seen as helpful to his own future prospects. In any event, Norway, Michigan, became
the location of Richard C. Flannigan's practice and residence for many years to come.
Photograph, above: The Marquette County, Michigan, Court House, built 1902-1904, now listed in the National Register of Historic Places; photo courtesy USDA Economic Research Service via Wikipedia; photo in the public domain.
I wonder what he thought of the money Patrick left him.
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