Charles Hammond (lawyer and journalist)

Charles Hammond

from a painting in the office of the Reporter of the Ohio Supreme Court in Columbus
Member of the Ohio Senate
from the Belmont County district
In office
December 6, 1813  December 3, 1815
Preceded by James Caldwell
Succeeded by John Patterson
Personal details
Born (1779-09-19)September 19, 1779
Baltimore County, Maryland
Died April 3, 1840(1840-04-03) (aged 60)
Cincinnati, Ohio
Political party Federalist
Spouse(s) Sally Tillinghast

Charles Hammond (September 19, 1779 – April 3, 1840) was a lawyer, newspaper editor, and state legislator in Ohio in the early nineteenth century.[1] He attained renown in his time as both a lawyer and a journalist,[2] but was largely neglected later.[3] Hammond is best known today for his role as the intellectual leader of Ohio's ultimately failed opposition to the Second Bank of the United States.[4]

Early life and education

Charles Hammond was born on September 19, 1779 to George and Elizabeth (née Wells) Hammond.[5] The family lived in Baltimore County, Maryland at the time of Hammond's birth, but moved to Brooke County in western Virginia (now in West Virginia) in 1785. After a very brief (two-day) attempt at learning the printing business in 1798, Hammond began studying law under Virginia lawyer Philip Doddridge in 1799.[6]

Career

Hammond received his license to practice law in Virginia in 1801,[7] and later that year acquired a license to practice in the Northwest Territory.[8] In November 1801, he was appointed as prosecuting attorney in Belmont County, Ohio.[8]

In 1804, Hammond moved to Wheeling, where he lived, practiced law, and wrote newspaper essays for five years.[9] He returned to Belmont County in 1809.[9]

In 1813, Hammond began publishing a newspaper, the Ohio Federalist, in St. Clairsville, Ohio.[10] That same year, Hammond was elected to a position in the Ohio Senate, serving a two-year term until 1815.[11] Hammond was elected to the lower house of the Ohio legislature in 1816, and re-elected in 1817, 1818, and 1820.[12]

Hammond did not play a very prominent role as a legislator until controversy arose between Ohio and the Second Bank of the United States.[13] This controversy thrust him into prominence for the next several years.[13]

Together with John Crafts Wright, Hammond represented Ohio and Auditor Ralph Osborn in the litigation that followed on the state's forcible collection of state taxes from the federal Bank.[14] The high-stakes legal wrangling lasted from late 1819 until early 1824, when it came to end with a loss for Hammond in the Supreme Court of the United States in Osborn v. Bank of the United States.[15][16] Hammond played an important role in the 1824 presidential campaign of Henry Clay - who had been opposing counsel representing the federal Bank in the litigation with Ohio.[17]

Hammond was nominated for a seat on the Ohio Supreme Court in 1822, but was rejected by the Ohio legislature.[18] He was appointed official reporter for the Ohio Supreme Court and held that role until he retired from the practice of law in 1838.[19] Near the close of his administration, John Quincy Adams offered Henry Clay a seat on the United States Supreme Court. Clay declined, and the seat was offered to Hammond, who also declined.[20]

Hammond became the editor of the semi-weekly Cincinnati Gazette in 1825.[19] Until his death in 1840, Hammond published a steady stream of commentary on law, politics, and public affairs.[21] Speaking of him decades later, William Henry Smith, who coordinated and managed the Associated Press, described Hammond as "the most distinguished American editor of his day."[22]

Personal life

Hammond married Sarah (Sally) Tillinghast in 1803.[8] Charles and Sally had a daughter, Almer (b. Oct. 12, 1813), and a son, Henry. They remained married until Sally's death in 1826, which followed a seven-year period of poor health.[23] Some years later, he married again.[24] Of his second wife, Weisenburger says only that she was "a sister of Thomas and Moses Moorehead of Zanesville."[24]

Death

Charles Hammond died on April 3, 1840.[25] He was memorialized in a poem by his assistant editor at the Gazette, William D. Gallagher, which included the lines:[26]

A keen perception of the right, A lasting hatred of the wrong,
An arm that failed not in the fight, A spirit strong,
Array’d him with the weak and low, No matter what the opposing pow’r
And gave a terror to his blow In battle's hour.
He asked no leader in the fight; No “times and seasons” sought to know;
But, when convinced his cause was right, He struck the blow.
Praise to his virtues!—greenly keep The memory of the race he ran!
Ne’er let the LIVING LESSON sleep Of such a man!

References

  1. Weisenburger, p. 338.
  2. Smith at 12 (describing Hammond as "a famous man in his time, who conferred honor upon two professions, and left the world richer for his having lived").
  3. Weisenburger at 338 (explaining that "[a] century after his life and work ... [Hammond's] name is practically unknown except to well-informed journalists and historical specialists; and to most of these his personality and achievements may seem blurred and indefinite").
  4. Ellis at 149 (identifying Hammond as "the leading figure among the antibank forces" in Ohio).
  5. Weisenburger, p. 340.
  6. Weisenburger, p. 342.
  7. Weisenburger, p. 343.
  8. 1 2 3 Weisenburger, p. 344.
  9. 1 2 Weisenburger, p. 345.
  10. Weisenburger, p. 347.
  11. Weisenburger, p. 348.
  12. Weisenburger, p. 351.
  13. 1 2 Weisenburger, p. 352.
  14. Ellis, pp. 149-184.
  15. Ellis, pp. 183-184.
  16. "Osborn v. Bank of the United States, 22 U.S. 738 (1824)". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 2015-02-10.
  17. Weisenburger, pp. 264-372.
  18. Ellis, p. 182.
  19. 1 2 Weisenburger, p. 372.
  20. Randall, p. 45.
  21. See generally Weisenburger.
  22. Smith, p. 29.
  23. Weisenburger, pp. 376-377.
  24. 1 2 Weisenburger, p. 425.
  25. Weisenburger, p. 426.
  26. Gallagher, William D. (1849). "Charles Hammond". The Western Quarterly Review. I: 171.

Sources

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