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Middle-aged Hannibal Hamlin |
Hamlin’s biggest claim to fame was serving as Vice President
under Abraham Lincoln during his first term, from March 4, 1861 to March 4,
1965.
Hamlin narrowly missed becoming President. In the 1864
election, Andrew Johnson was elected Lincoln’s second Vice President and
replaced Hamlin only 42 days before Lincoln died. Two of Hamlin’s children
(Charles and Sarah) were present at Ford’s Theater the night Lincoln was shot.
He started out in the Democratic Party, but Hamlin was an
active opponent of slavery and switched to the newly formed Republican Party in
1856.
If Hamlin had been on the ticket again in 1864, he would
have become President seven weeks after the inauguration. Why wasn’t he on it?
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"The Republican Party Banner for 1860" |
Hamlin, by most accounts, was not personally close to
Lincoln. He served through most of the Civil War and also served a term in the
Maine militia during the hostilities. He did not take a strong role in the
executive administration, but concentrated more on his role as presiding
officer of the U.S. Senate.
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Andrew Johnson in 1859 |
Confederate States of America, Johnson remained firmly with the Union. He was the only sitting senator from a Confederate state who did not resign his seat upon learning of his state's secession. Lincoln appointed him military governor of Tennessee in 1864, when most of its territory was re-taken by the Union. Many saw him as the best choice for a running mate for Lincoln in the upcoming election.
Lincoln was re-elected, but Hamlin left office. After this,
Hamlin served as Collector of the Port in Boston for several years. In 1869, he
returned to the U.S. Senate, where he had also served from 1848 to 1861, and was named U.S. Minister to Spain in 1881.
He had also served earlier as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives and
the twenty-sixth governor of Maine.
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Older Hannibal Hamlin |
Hamlin was born in 1809 in Paris, Massachusetts, which is now Paris, Maine. Maine was at that time still a part of Massachusetts. He died in 1891, at age 81, in Bangor, Maine.
He married Sarah Jane Emery of Paris Hill, Maine in 1833.
They had four children: George, Charles, Cyrus, and Sarah. Mrs. Hamlin died in
1855.
In 1856, Hamlin married Sarah’s half-sister, Ellen Vesta
Emery. They had two children together: Hannibal E., and Frank. Ellen Hamblin
died in 1925.
In the mystery I’m writing, it’s a fictional incident
concerning one of the Hamlin children that enters into my plot. If you’d like
to win a different one of my mystery novels, comment below, and be sure to
leave your contact information so we can tell you if you won. Winner can choose
Mainely Mysteries (three murder mysteries set in northern Maine with a strong faith thread and romance) or Trouble Brewing (cozy mystery where a letter written by General Henry Knox is stolen).
Susan Page Davis is the author of more than seventy novels
and novellas in the mystery, romantic suspense, and historical romance genres.
A Maine native, she now lives in western Kentucky. She is a winner of the Carol
Award, Inspirational Readers’ Choice Award, Will Rogers Medallion, and more.
Visit her website at www.susanpagedavis.com, where you can see all her books,
sign up for her occasional newsletter, enter a month book drawing, and read a
short story on her Romance page.
Historical photos in this blog are in the public domain and/or available through the Library of Congress.
Historical photos in this blog are in the public domain and/or available through the Library of Congress.