HANNIBAL HAMLIN Abraham Lincoln VP RR Railroad pass Philadelphia Wilmington 1873


HANNIBAL HAMLIN Abraham Lincoln VP RR Railroad pass Philadelphia Wilmington 1873

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HANNIBAL HAMLIN Abraham Lincoln VP RR Railroad pass Philadelphia Wilmington 1873:
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PHILADELPHIA WILMINGTON BALTIMORE RAILROAD

1873

HON HANNIBAL HAMLIN

United States Senate until Dec 31, 1873 unless otherwise ordered

signed by Isaac Hinckley (President RR)

excellent condition

I am selling many other RR passes / booklets / maps from the same family estate

Hannibal HamlinFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Hannibal Hamlin15th Vice President of the United StatesIn office
March 4, 1861– March 4, 1865PresidentAbraham LincolnPreceded byJohn C. BreckinridgeSucceeded byAndrew JohnsonUnited States Senator
from MaineIn office
June 8, 1848– January 7, 1857Preceded byWyman B. S. MoorSucceeded byAmos NourseIn office
March 4, 1857– January 17, 1861Preceded byAmos NourseSucceeded byLot M. MorrillIn office
March 4, 1869– March 3, 1881Preceded byLot M. MorrillSucceeded byEugene Hale26th Governor of MaineIn office
January 8, 1857– February 25, 1857Preceded bySamuel WellsSucceeded byJoseph H. WilliamsMember of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from Maine\'s 6th districtIn office
March 4, 1843– March 3, 1847Preceded byAlfred MarshallSucceeded byJames S. WileyUnited States Minister to SpainIn office
June 30, 1881– October 17, 1882Appointed byJames GarfieldPreceded byLucius FairchildSucceeded byJohn W. FosterPersonal detailsBorn(1809-08-27)August 27, 1809
Paris, MaineDiedJuly 4, 1891(1891-07-04) (aged81)
Bangor, MainePolitical partyDemocratic (until 1856)
RepublicanSpouse(s)Sarah Jane Emery(m.1833–55), her death
Ellen Vesta Emery Hamlin(m.1856–91), his Hamlin (August 27, 1809– July 4, 1891) was the 15th Vice President of the United States (1861–1865), serving under President Abraham Lincoln during the American Civil War. He was the first Vice President from the Republican Party.

Prior to his election in 1860, Hamlin served in the United States Senate, the House of Representatives, and, briefly, as the 26th Governor of Maine.


Hamlin was born to Anna (née Livermore) and Cyrus Hamlin in Paris, Maine. He was a descendant in the sixth generation of English colonist James Hamlin, who had settled in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1639 . Hamlin was a great nephew of U.S. Senator Samuel Livermore II of New Hampshire,[citation needed] and a grandson of Stephen Emery, Maine\'s Attorney General in 1839–1840.

Hamlin attended the district schools and Hebron Academy and later managed his father\'s farm. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1833. He began practicing in Hampden, a suburb of Bangor, where he lived until 1848.

Hamlin in his younger years

Hamlin married Sarah Jane Emery of Paris Hill in 1833. After Sarah died in 1855, he married her half-sister, Ellen Vesta Emery in 1856. He had four children with Sarah: George, Charles, Cyrus and Sarah, and two, Hannibal E. and Frank, with Ellen. Ellen Hamlin died in 1925.[1]

Political beginnings[edit]

Hamlin\'s political career began in 1836, when he began a term in the Maine House of Representatives after being elected the year before.

Appointed a Major on the staff of Governor John Fairfield, he served with the militia in the bloodless Aroostook War of 1839, and the negotiations he facilitated between Fairfield and Lieutenant Governor John Harvey of New Brunswick helped reduce tensions and make possible the Webster-Ashburton Treaty, which ended the war.

Hamlin unsuccessfully ran for the United States House of Representatives in 1840 and left the State House in 1841. He later served two terms in the United States House of Representatives, from 1843–1847. He was elected to fill a U.S. Senate vacancy in 1848, and to a full term in 1851. A Democrat at the beginning of his career, Hamlin supported the candidacy of Franklin Pierce in 1852.

From the very beginning of his service in Congress, he was prominent as an opponent of the extension of slavery. He was a conspicuous supporter of the Wilmot Proviso and spoke against the Compromise Measures of 1850. In 1854, he strongly opposed the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise. After the Democratic Party endorsed that repeal at the 1856 Democratic National Convention, on June 12, 1856, he withdrew from the Democratic Party and joined the newly organized Republican Party, causing a national sensation.

The Republicans nominated him for Governor of Maine in the same year. He carried the election by a large majority and was inaugurated on January 8, 1857. In the latter part of February 1857, however, he resigned the governorship, and was again a member of the United States Senate from 1857 to January 1861.

Vice presidency[edit] 1860 election campaign button for Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin. The other side of the button has Lincoln\'s portrait.

In 1861, Hamlin became Vice President under Abraham Lincoln, whom he did not meet until after the election. Maine was the first state in the Northeast to embrace the Republican Party, and the Lincoln-Hamlin ticket thus made sense in terms of regional balance. Hamlin was also a strong orator, and a known opponent of slavery. While serving as Vice President, Hamlin had little authority in the Lincoln Administration, although he urged both the Emancipation Proclamation and the arming of Black Americans. He strongly supported Joseph Hooker\'s appointment as commander of the Army of the Potomac, which was a dismal failure. In June 1864, the Republicans and War Democrats joined to form the National Union Party. Although Lincoln was renominated, War Democrat Andrew Johnson of Tennessee was named to replace Hamlin as Lincoln\'s running mate. Lincoln was seeking to broaden his base of support and was also looking ahead to Southern Reconstruction, at which Johnson had proven himself adept as military governor of occupied Tennessee. Hamlin, by contrast, was an ally of Northern radicals (who would later impeach Johnson). Lincoln and Johnson were elected in November 1864, and Hamlin\'s term expired on March 4, 1865.

Hamlin and Lincoln were not close personally, but had a good working relationship. At the time, White House etiquette did not require the Vice President to regularly attend cabinet meetings; thus, Hamlin did not regularly visit the White House. It was said that Mary Todd Lincoln and Hamlin disliked each other. For his part, Hamlin complained, \"I am only a fifth wheel of a coach and can do little for my friends.\"[2]

Although Hamlin narrowly missed becoming President, his vice presidency would usher in a half-century of sustained national influence for the Maine Republican Party. In the period 1861–1911, Maine Republicans occupied the offices of Vice President, Secretary of the Treasury (twice), Secretary of State, President pro tempore of the United States Senate, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives (twice), and would field a national presidential candidate in James G. Blaine, a level of influence in national politics unmatched by subsequent Maine political delegations.

Later life and death[edit]

Not content with private life, Hamlin returned to the U.S. Senate in 1869 to serve two more 6-year terms before declining to run for re-election in 1880 because of an ailing heart. His last duty as a public servant came in 1881 when then-Secretary of State James G. Blaine convinced President James A. Garfield to name Hamlin as United States Ambassador to Spain. On June 30, 1881, Hamlin was appointed as the United States Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Spain (the ministerial post\'s official title until 1913 when it became Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary). On December 20, 1881, Hamlin was officially presented with ambassadorship credentials and held the post until October 17, 1882.

Upon returning from Spain in the fall of 1882, Hamlin retired from public life to his home in Bangor, Maine, which he had previously purchased in 1851. The Hannibal Hamlin House – as it is known today – is located in central Bangor at 15 5th Street; incorporating Victorian, Italianate, and Mansard-style architecture, the mansion was posted to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.[3]

On Independence Day, July 4, 1891, Hamlin collapsed and fell unconscious while playing cards at the Tarratine Club he founded in downtown Bangor. He was then placed on one of the club\'s couches and died in the evening a few hours later. He was 81. Hannibal Hamlin was buried with honors in the Hamlin family plot at Mount Hope Cemetery in Bangor, Maine.[4] He had survived six of his successors as Vice President: Andrew Johnson, Schuyler Colfax, Henry Wilson, William A. Wheeler, Chester A. Arthur and Thomas A. Hendricks. From June 4, 1887 to March 4, 1889, he was the only living Vice President.

Family[edit] Hamlin in his elder years

Hamlin had four sons who grew to adulthood: Charles Hamlin, Cyrus Hamlin, Hannibal Emery and Frank Hamlin. Charles and Cyrus served in the Union forces during the Civil War, both becoming generals, Charles by brevet. Cyrus was among the first Union officers to argue for the enlistment of black troops, and himself commanded a brigade of freemen in the Mississippi River campaign. Charles and sister Sarah were present at Ford\'s Theater the night of Lincoln\'s assassination. Hannibal Emery Hamlin was Maine Attorney General from 1905 to 1908. Hannibal Hamlin\'s great-granddaughter Sally Hamlin was a child actor who made many spoken word recordings for the Victor Talking Machine Company in the early years of the 20th century.

Hannibal\'s older brother, Elijah Livermore Hamlin, was president of the Mutual Fire Insurance Co. of Bangor, and the Bangor Institution for Savings.[5] He was twice an unsuccessful candidate for Governor of Maine in the late 1840s, though he did serve as Mayor of Bangor in 1851–52. The brothers were members of different political parties (Hannibal a Democrat, and Elijah a Whig) before both becoming Republican in the later 1850s.[6] Hannibal\'s nephew (Elijah\'s son) Augustus Choate Hamlin was a physician, artist, mineralogist, author, and historian. He was also Mayor of Bangor in 1877–78, and a founding member of the Bangor Historical Society.[7] Augustus served as surgeon in the 2nd Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment during the Civil War, eventually becoming a U.S. Army Medical Inspector, and later the Surgeon General of Maine. He wrote books about Andersonville Prison and the Battle of Chancellorsville.[8]

Hannibal\'s first cousin Cyrus Hamlin, who was a graduate of the Bangor Theological Seminary, became a missionary in Turkey, where he founded Robert College. He later became president of Middlebury College in Vermont. His son, A. D. F. Hamlin, Hannibal\'s first cousin once removed, became a professor of architecture at Columbia University and a noted architectural historian.

There are biographies of Hamlin by his grandson Charles E. Hamlin (published 1899, reprinted 1971) and by H. Draper Hunt (published 1969).

Honors[edit]

Hamlin County in South Dakota is named in his honor, as are Hamlin, Kansas, Hamlin, New York, Hamlin, West Virginia, and both Hamlin Township and Hamlin Lake in Mason County, Michigan. There are statues in Hamlin\'s likeness in the United States Capitol and in a public park (Norumbega Mall) in Bangor, Maine. There is also a building on the University of Maine Campus, in Orono, named Hannibal Hamlin Hall. This burned down in 1945, in a fire that killed two students, but was subsequently rebuilt. Hannibal Hamlin Memorial Library is next to his birthplace in Paris, Maine.

Sculptor Charles Tefft of Brewer, Maine, created this bronze statue of Hannibal Hamlin, which was dedicated in 1927 in downtown Bangor.

Hamlin\'s house in Bangor subsequently housed the Presidents of the adjacent Bangor Theological Seminary. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, as is Hamlin\'s house in Paris, Draper Hunt (1969). Hannibal Hamlin of Maine, Lincoln\'s first Vice-President. Syracuse University Press. ISBN978-0-8156-2142-3. OCLC24587.

  • Charles Eugene Hamlin (1899). The Life and Times of Hannibal Hamlin. Syracuse University Press. OCLC1559174.
  • Political officesPrecededby
    John C. BreckinridgeVice President of the United States
    March 4, 1861– March 4, 1865Succeededby
    Andrew JohnsonPrecededby
    Samuel WellsGovernor of Maine
    January 8– February 25, 1857Succeededby
    Joseph H. WilliamsPrecededby
    John Z. GoodrichCollector of Customs for the Port of Boston
    1865 – 1866Succeededby
    Darius N. CouchUnited States SenatePrecededby
    Lot M. MorrillU.S. Senator (Class 1) from Maine
    March 4, 1869– March 4, 1881
    Served alongside: William P. Fessenden, Lot M. Morrill, James G. BlaineSucceededby
    Eugene HalePrecededby
    Amos NourseU.S. Senator (Class 1) from Maine
    March 4, 1857– January 17, 1861
    Served alongside: William P. FessendenSucceededby
    Lot M. MorrillPrecededby
    Wyman B. S. MoorU.S. Senator (Class 1) from Maine
    June 8, 1848– January 7, 1857
    Served alongside: James W. Bradbury and William P. FessendenSucceededby
    Amos NourseUnited States House of RepresentativesPrecededby
    Alfred from Maine\'s 6th congressional district
    March 4, 1843– March 4, 1847Succeededby
    James S. WileyParty political officesPrecededby
    William L. DaytonRepublican vice presidential nominee
    1860Succeededby
    Andrew Johnson(1)Diplomatic postsPrecededby
    Lucius FairchildUnited States Minister to Spain
    June 30, 1881– October 17, 1882Succeededby
    John W. Foster

    Isaac Hinckley (1815-1888) was a president of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad and the founder of Ridley Park, Pennsylvania.

    Hinckley was born on Oct. 28, 1815, in Hingham, Massachusetts, a son of Isaac Hinckley (1793-1818), who had gone to sea at a young age and rose to command three ships: the brig Reaper (1809–10), which he sailed on a trading voyage from Boston to Aden and Calcutta; the ship Tartar (1812–13), on another voyage to Calcutta; and finally the ship Canton (1815–18) for three voyages from Boston to Guangdong, China. He died while homebound on the third of these. The shipmaster left a widow in Hingham and six children, aged 2 to 11, including three-year-old Isaac.[1]

    The younger Isaac Hinckley graduated from Harvard University in 1834. He took his first railroad job in 1846, as Superintendent of Transportation for the Boston and Providence Railroad and worked there until January 1848. He then took other railroad jobs and on April 1, 1865, was appointed president of the PW&B.[2]

    He was also president of the Junction Railroad, the short line built to connect the PW&B and three other railroads in West Philadelphia.[2]

    In 1880 and 1881, Hinckley helped the PRR take control of the PW&B,[2] a move that ultimately forced the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad to build a costly new southwest approach to Philadelphia.

    On Dec. 12, 1887, Hinckley chartered Ridley Park, a borough to the southwest of Philadelphia, in an effort to create an analog to the Philadelphia Main Line string of suburbs founded and served, lucratively, by the Pennsylvania Railroad.[3]

    Hinckley died in Philadelphia, still the president of the PW&B, on March 28, 1888.[2]



    HANNIBAL HAMLIN Abraham Lincoln VP RR Railroad pass Philadelphia Wilmington 1873:
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