In that same year Stephan moved to Grand Rapids (now Wisconsin Rapids), WI where he was appointed District Attorney and practiced there until mid 1858, when he moved back to Plover to form a law partnership with his father. In the spring of 1862 he was appointed by President Abraham Lincoln as Register of the Land Office at Stevens Point, which office he held until March 1884.
Mr. Alban moved to Wausau, WI in 1872. After his term as register expired in 1884 he returned to the private practice of law and was appointed Municipal Judge of Marathon County. In 1888 he moved to Rhinelander, WI and formed a partnership with John Barnes, later Justice of the Supreme Court. The firm of Alban & Barnes dissolved in July 1897. In 1906 Mr. Alban was appointed postmaster at Rhinelander, an office he held until the time of his death.
In September 1869, Stephan Alban was married to Miss Helen N. Cowan of Menasha, WI. Together they had three daughters. Mr. Alban was an ardent Mason, holding virtually every post and award in the Masonic Order. The versatile writer and brilliant orator that Mr. Alban was, he contributed often to magazines and local newspapers. During his time in Wausau, using the moniker "Rambler." He contributed enough articles to the Pilot that would have made up an entire book. While in Rhinelander, he published what he called "Lay Sermons," which he said "seemed to the writer simply a convenient and possibly an effective medium for heart-to-heart talks with his neighbors."
Stephan Alban died in Rhinelander, WI from complications from pneumonia on December 27, 1913.
In that same year Stephan moved to Grand Rapids (now Wisconsin Rapids), WI where he was appointed District Attorney and practiced there until mid 1858, when he moved back to Plover to form a law partnership with his father. In the spring of 1862 he was appointed by President Abraham Lincoln as Register of the Land Office at Stevens Point, which office he held until March 1884.
Mr. Alban moved to Wausau, WI in 1872. After his term as register expired in 1884 he returned to the private practice of law and was appointed Municipal Judge of Marathon County. In 1888 he moved to Rhinelander, WI and formed a partnership with John Barnes, later Justice of the Supreme Court. The firm of Alban & Barnes dissolved in July 1897. In 1906 Mr. Alban was appointed postmaster at Rhinelander, an office he held until the time of his death.
In September 1869, Stephan Alban was married to Miss Helen N. Cowan of Menasha, WI. Together they had three daughters. Mr. Alban was an ardent Mason, holding virtually every post and award in the Masonic Order. The versatile writer and brilliant orator that Mr. Alban was, he contributed often to magazines and local newspapers. During his time in Wausau, using the moniker "Rambler." He contributed enough articles to the Pilot that would have made up an entire book. While in Rhinelander, he published what he called "Lay Sermons," which he said "seemed to the writer simply a convenient and possibly an effective medium for heart-to-heart talks with his neighbors."
Stephan Alban died in Rhinelander, WI from complications from pneumonia on December 27, 1913.
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