Background
He was the son of Timothy Stow.
He was the son of Timothy Stow.
The family removed first to Warrensburg, and in 1802 to Bolton, New New York When Cowen was admitted to the bar and commenced practice, Stow continued his studies in the office of Gansevoort and Cowen in Gansevoort"s Mills, Saratoga County, New York, and was admitted to the bar in 1811. He commenced practice in Elizabethtown, New York, and in 1829, he was Postmaster there, and Essex County Treasurer.
In 1834, in an address delivered before a Temperance Society in Keeseville, he was "the first man to advocate legislation to prohibit all traffic in intoxicating liquor, as a beverage."
Later he lived at Keeseville, New York, and was District Attorney of Essex County from 1838 to 1844.
Later he moved to Troy, New New York After the resignation of Levi South. Chatfield, Stow was appointed New York State Attorney General by Governor Horatio Seymour on December 8, 1853, to fill the vacancy until the end of the year.