His brother's lawyer, Thomas Ford, then asked why he was embarrassed.
One defense lawyer, Thomas Ford, denounced the idea as a "cheering section."
"At that time, people felt it represented too much control over the use of their property," said the senior planner here, Thomas Ford.
Forquer was the older half-brother of Thomas Ford, who was the state's governor from 1842 to 1846.
She "could say no," Thomas Ford, a defense attorney, told the jury as he continued his closing argument.
Her father, Thomas Ford, refused to allow her to perform publicly.
The building stood open for ten years until it was restored and remodelled internally by Thomas Ford in 1950.
Another defense lawyer, Thomas Ford, said, "What we have is a manifest act of withholding vital information."
Forquer's younger half brother, Thomas Ford, would become the State's governor.
He and another defense lawyer, Thomas Ford, argued that the prosecution was improperly coaching the young woman.