About Henry Herrington
Henry Herrington Beam built his academic foundation in Michigan before turning to the law. He attended the University of Michigan–Ann Arbor in 1998 and later earned his Juris Doctor from Western Michigan University Cooley Law School in 2005. The two degrees bookend a period of study that spans public university education and a law school known for serving a diverse student body.
After finishing law school, Beam became part of Arizona’s legal community. He is admitted to practice in Arizona and has maintained a professional presence in the state. His pathway from Midwestern schools to an Arizona license is part of a broader geographic and professional shift that many lawyers make when they decide where to practice.
Beam’s career has followed the steady rhythm of a practicing attorney: learning courtroom procedure, handling filings, preparing clients, and appearing before tribunals and administrative bodies. He has worked on matters that require an understanding of Arizona law and its procedures. The record indicates a lawyer who navigated the transition from law student to member of a state bar and who has sustained that status over time.
Colleagues and clients often notice different things about an attorney’s practice: the precision of written motions, the clarity of explanations, or the practical approach to scheduling and deadlines. Beam’s professional life reflects those routine but essential attributes of practice. He has engaged in tasks that range from legal research to client counseling, reflecting the varied day-to-day work of an admitted attorney.
Outside the plain facts of admission and education, Beam’s profile is shaped by the institutions that trained him. The University of Michigan provided a foundation in liberal learning, while Cooley Law School supplied the legal training that enabled bar admission. Those credentials create a straightforward narrative: undergraduate study followed by professional legal education, then entry into practice.
Today Beam practices in Arizona, where he advises and represents clients on matters governed by Arizona law. His current work is grounded in the state bar admission he holds and the legal education he completed in 2005.