Wiram Knowlton


Wiram Knowlton was an American lawyer, jurist, and Wisconsin pioneer. He was one of the first six Wisconsin circuit court judges, his circuit being the vast, lightly-populated western quarter of the new state; he served from 1850 to 1856. As a circuit court judge in this era, he was an ex officio justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
His elder brother James H. Knowlton was also a Wisconsin pioneer politician, lawyer, and judge.

Biography

Born in Canandaigua, New York, Knowlton moved to Janesville, Wisconsin Territory, in 1837 and began to study law. He was admitted to the bar in 1840 and started a law practice in Prairie du Chien, where he was also elected to the Wisconsin Territorial Council from 1845 to 1847.
During the Mexican–American War, he raised a company of men using the W.H.C. Folsom House. He was elected captain of the company and they were stationed at Fort Winnebago for frontier duty, freeing up the regular garrison to be redeployed to the south. In July 1850, he was elected Wisconsin Circuit Court judge for the newly created 6th circuit and sworn into office in August. Because of this office, he also served as a justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, which at the time was composed of Wisconsin's circuit court judges. This changed in 1853, when a separate supreme court was created by an act of the Wisconsin Legislature. Knowlton died in Menekaunee, Wisconsin.

Personal life and family

Wiram Knowlton was the fourth of six children born to Ephraim Hiram Baker Knowlton and his wife Anna. The Knowltons were descendants of Captain William Knowlton, who owned a ship by which his family emigrated from England to the Plymouth Colony about 1632.
Wiram Knowlton's elder brother, James H. Knowlton, was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly and an early probate judge in Lafayette County, Wisconsin.