Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, edited by James
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GRANGER, Daniel Tristram, lawyer, born in Saco, Maine, 18 July, 1807; died in Eastport, 27 December 1854. He was graduated at Bowdoin in 1826, his part in the commencement being an oration in French, then first introduced among the exercises. He studied law in the office of Judge Ether Shep-Icy, was admitted to the bar in 1829, and began practice in Newfield. In July, 1833, he moved to Eastport, and became a partner of Frederic Hobbs, and in 1837 he assumed the management of the whole of the extensive business of the firm. In 1854 he was appointed a judge on the supreme bench of Maine, but declined the appointment because of failing health. He was distinguished throughout the state for his profound legal learn-rag, his sagacity as a counsellor, the extreme care with which his cases were prepared, and the fluency and earnestness with which they were presented.
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