Henry Flagg French was born in Chester, Rockingham County, New Hampshire on August 14, 1813, to the Honorable Daniel French, who was attorney general of New Hampshire and a judge on the state’s Supreme Court and Sarah Wingate Flagg Bell French. He died November 20, 1885, in Middlesex County, Concord, Massachusetts. He is buried at Exeter Cemetery, in Rockingham County, New Hampshire.
On October 9, 1838, he married Anne Richardson, daughter of William Merchant Richardson, chief justice of New Hampshire. They had four children: Henriette Van Mater French Hollis, William Merchant Richardson French, Sarah Flagg French Bartlett, and Daniel Chester French. Three years after Anne Richardson's death, on September 29, 1859, he married Pamela Mellen Prentice,. They had no children.
Career
He was admitted to the bar on August 14, 1834. He practiced law in Chester for five years, until his father's death in 1840. In 1839 he succeeded his father as postmaster in Chester. He then moved to Portsmouth, where he lived for one year, and then in 1842 he moved to Exeter and continued to practice law there until August 1855. He was a county solicitor from 1838 to 1848 and a bank commissioner from 1848 to 1852. He was justice of the court of common appeals from 1855 to 1859. He was district attorney for Suffolk County from 1862 to 1865. From 1852 to 1859 he was president of the Rockingham Agricultural Society. From 1865 to 1866 he was president of the Massachusetts Agricultural College. In 1852 he received honorary Master of Arts degree from Dartmouth College. On August 15, 1855, he was appointed justice of the court of common appeals. He held that office until August 1, 1859. In September 1859 he opened a law office in Boston. In 1860 he moved his family to Cambridge, where he continued to live for some years. On November 19, 1862, he was appointed assistant district attorney and held that position until July 1865. In September 1865 he moved to Amherst. In 1867 he resumed his law practice in Boston. In 1876 he was appointed by President Grant as 2nd assistant secretary of the United States Treasury, where he served until 1885.
Selected works
Though he only published one full book, French was a very prolific writer and wrote hundreds of articles for a number of agricultural journals.
, French's treatise giving full details on tile drainage and the use of the French drain.
, Report of the Commissioner of Patents for the Year 1859, Agriculture . p.139-160. Advances in plowing methods and technologies such as the steam plow.
Report of the Commissioner of Patents for the Year 1860, Agriculture . p.140-165.
, Report of the Secretary of Agriculture for the Year 1865. p. 137-186. A thorough history of agricultural colleges in the United States and Europe, along with their academic curricula.
In the span of nearly 20 years Henry F. French wrote over 120 articles for the New England Farmer, a paper operated by his brother-in-law, Simon Brown, which circulated around New England and much of the Northeast United States, with letters from readers as far away as Maryland. The subjects of these articles were diverse, with many having strictly practical advice, while others being more humanitarian and philosophical in nature. Topics covered include French's travels to Europe farm maintenance, drainage, orcharding, dairy farming, women's rights, the advantages of an education, and various thoughts on establishing a more agrarian, egalitarian American society.
, Vol. 5, 1853
, Vol. 6, 1854
, Vol. 7, 1855
, Vol. 8, 1856
, Vol. 9, 1857, during this year French was on tour in Europe doing research on tile drainage. It was from this experience that he developed the French drain
, Vol 10, 1858
, Vol 11, 1859
, Vol. 12, 1860
, Vol. 13, 1861
, Vol. 14, 1862
, Vol. 15, 1863, The January issue is the last with French listed as an "Associate Editor" as his duties as "Assistant District Attorney" of Suffolk County proved too time consuming.
, Vol. 16, 1864.
, Vol. 1, 1867, the magazine was relaunched following a period of absence from 1865 to 1866.