[Titus, Hon. Robert C.]
Titus, Hon. Robert C.,
Buffalo, justice of the Supreme Court, is of English descent, and
was born in Eden, Erie county, October 24, 1839. His ancestors lived
for many generations in England, whence they came to America at
an early day. Timothy Titus had a son Robert, whose son, James B.
Titus, was born in Hebron, N. Y., July 19, 1794, and moved with
his parents to Richfield, Otsego county, N. Y., where he was married,
January 2, 1817, to Esther, daughter of Sterling Yeomans. This young
couple came on horseback to Eden, Erie county, and first lived in
a rude log house; in 1831 they moved into a larger and better dwelling.
Mr. Titus was a colonel in the State militia, a prominent factor
in local affairs, and died in 1839, leaving a wife and eight children,
of whom Robert C. is the youngest. Robert C. Titus entered Oberlin
College in 1858 and spent two years, teaching school to pay his
way. He then began the study of law in Hamburg, Erie county, with
Horace Boies, afterward governor of Iowa, and in 1863 organized
a company of volunteers and was mustered into the 98th Regt. N.
G. N. Y. He was honorably discharged December 22, 1864, and resuming
his law studies was admitted to the bar in 1865. For one year he
was special deputy county clerk under Dr. Lewis P. Dayton, and then
began active practice in Hamburg. In 1867 he was the Democratic
candidate for member of assembly, and in 1871 was nominated for
surrogate of Erie county and ran about 800 votes ahead of his ticket.
For four years (1868-71) he represented Hamburg on the Board of
Supervisors. In 1873 he came to Buffalo and formed a law partnership
with Joel L. Walker, and in 1877 he was elected district attorney
of Erie county by a 2,200 majority; in 1880 he was renominated for
this office and defeated, though he ran 1,200 votes ahead of his
ticket. He was a member of the law firms of Osgoodby, Titus & Moot
from 1879 to 1883 and of Titus & Farrington from 1883 to 1886. In
1881 he was unanimously nominated by the Democrats for State senator
from the 31st district and was elected by a majority of 5,528, running
over 7,000 ahead of his ticket, and was re-elected in 1883. In 1885
he was elected a judge of the Superior Court of Buffalo, and in
January, 1891, was made chief judge by his associates. Under the
new constitution of 1894, abolishing the Superior Court, he became
a justice of the Supreme Court, which office he still holds. In
the fall of 1896 he was the Democratic candidate for judge of the
Court of Appeals. Judge Titus is one of the ablest lawyers and foremost
jurists of Western New York. He is a thirty-second degree Mason,
a public spirited citizen, and a scholar of broad culture and rare
attainments. In 1867 he married Arvilla, daughter of Allen Clark
of Gowanda, N. Y., and they have two children: Amy, wife of Dan
B. Worthington, and Allen Sterling Titus, a student of Trinity College,
class of 1900.
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