Memoirs of the judiciary and the bar of New England for the nineteenth century : with a history of the judicial system of New England . )ators in high honor. Hewaited for public office, and that in a day wdi(Mipolitical gardens blossoiued with claims andbooms and self-pusliings, and when modestyhad gone out of the conventions as a lostgrace. 28 THE JUDICIARY AND THE BAR OF NEW ENGLAND. In alluiling to (!overiior IIul)l)<mls charac-teristics as a lawyer tlie same eulogist (thegifted and eloijuent liohiiison) said: Hispresence was the presence of a inastei, in thestruggles of reflection, the
Memoirs of the judiciary and the bar of New England for the nineteenth century : with a history of the judicial system of New England . )ators in high honor. Hewaited for public office, and that in a day wdi(Mipolitical gardens blossoiued with claims andbooms and self-pusliings, and when modestyhad gone out of the conventions as a lostgrace. 28 THE JUDICIARY AND THE BAR OF NEW ENGLAND. In alluiling to (!overiior IIul)l)<mls charac-teristics as a lawyer tlie same eulogist (thegifted and eloijuent liohiiison) said: Hispresence was the presence of a inastei, in thestruggles of reflection, the flashes of insight,the responsibilities of counsel, the prei)arationof causes, the ]ierils of examinations and thetriumphs of advocacy, riiero is no weapon ofhonorable warfare which he did nut wield ;there is no method of skillful defense which hedid not use. No condiet of autiiorities con-fused him, fdi he poiued them all into thecrucible of his fervent analysis and burned. RICHARD D. IIUUBARD. away their dross. He feared n(i antagonistliowever great, lie despised no associate how-ever humble. He brought to his practicegreat learning, but he was linked to no pastwhich must not yield to a bettei preseid. ]lelionored a technicality which covered a princi-ple or was tied to a policy, but for a technicalit}which had only the credentials of .scrupulosityand of weed-tithing, he had only of the old judges beheld in highre-spect, but for their wigs and gowns he hadonl} a smile. In 18G7 Governor Hubbard fornjed a lawpartnership with Loren 1. Waldo and AlvinP. Hyde, the firm style being Waldo, Hubbard tt Plyde. This relation was continuet! untilthe death of Judge Waldo in 1881, changed to IIul)bard, Hyde & Ciross,Charles E. Ciross then coming into the fiim.\}\^o\\ the death of CJovernor Hubbard in 1884,the style became Hyde, (iross ife Hyde, andstill later, in 1894, upon the death of Alvin , again changed to (iross, Hyd
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