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Harrison Carroll Hobart

Harrison Carroll Hobart (January 31, 1815 – January 26, 1902) was an American lawyer, Democratic politician, and Union Army officer during the American Civil War. He was the 2nd speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly, and served in the 1st Wisconsin Legislature as a member of the Wisconsin Senate. He was the Democratic nominee for Governor of Wisconsin in 1859 and 1865.

Harrison Carroll Hobart
2nd Speaker of the Wisconsin Assembly
In office
January 10, 1849 – January 7, 1850
Preceded byNinian E. Whiteside
Succeeded byMoses M. Strong
Member of the Wisconsin Senate
from the 1st district
In office
June 5, 1848 – January 1, 1849
Preceded byPosition Established
Succeeded byLemuel Goodell
Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
In office
January 7, 1867 – January 6, 1868
Preceded byWilliam Pitt Lynde
Succeeded byGeorge Abert
ConstituencyMilwaukee 2nd district
In office
January 3, 1859 – January 2, 1860
Preceded byJames Robinson
Succeeded byAsaph Green
ConstituencyCalumet district
In office
January 1, 1849 – January 7, 1850
Preceded byCharles E. Morris
Succeeded byHoratio N. Smith
ConstituencySheboygan 1st district
Member of the House of Representatives of the Wisconsin Territory for Sheboygan and Washington counties
In office
January 4, 1847 – October 18, 1847
Preceded byPosition Established
Succeeded byBenjamin H. Mooers
Personal details
Born(1815-01-31)January 31, 1815
Ashburnham, Massachusetts
DiedJanuary 26, 1902(1902-01-26) (aged 86)
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Resting placeForest Home Cemetery, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Political partyDemocratic
Spouses
  • Frances Imogen Lowery
    (m. 1854; died 1855)
  • Anna Clarence Litch (Mower)
    (m. 1857; died 1896)
Alma materDartmouth College
Professionlawyer, politician
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceUnited States Volunteers
Union Army
Years of service1861–1865
Rank
Unit4th Reg. Wis. Vol. Infantry
Commands
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War

Early life edit

Harrison Carroll Hobart was born on January 31, 1815, in Ashburnham, Massachusetts.[1] He was raised on his father's farm and received little formal education in his youth. At age 16, he moved to New Hampshire, and worked as an apprentice for three years in the print shop of John Randall Reding. He earned enough to obtain additional schooling at Concord Literary Institute and New Hampton Academy.[2]

He entered Dartmouth College in 1838 and graduated in 1842, supporting himself through college by teaching at the Rochester Academy. While attending Dartmouth, he became one of the founders of the Kappa Kappa Kappa fraternity along with two of his closest companions, Judge Stephen Gordon Nash, and John Dudley Philbrick, all Class of 1842.[3] Hobart was motivated by a spirit of resistance to class oligarchy and social privilege, thus imbued this spirit into the new organization. After leaving Dartmouth, he studied law in Boston in the office of Robert Rantoul, Jr., and was admitted to the Massachusetts bar in 1845.[2]

Wisconsin edit

He moved to the Wisconsin Territory the following year and settled near Sheboygan, on the coast of Lake Michigan. He quickly became a prominent lawyer in the area and became involved in local politics as a member of the Democratic Party.[2]

In 1847, Hobart served in the Wisconsin Territorial House of Representatives, the lower house of the territory's Legislative Assembly. After Wisconsin became a state, he was elected to represent Wisconsin's 1st State Senate district (Brown, Calumet, Manitowoc, and Sheboygan counties) in the 1st Wisconsin Legislature meeting in 1848. In the fall of 1848, he was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly for 1849 and was chosen as Speaker by the Assembly membership at the start of the session.[2] His old Senate seat was taken by fellow Democrat Lemuel Goodell.

In 1850, he was nominated by the Democratic Party to be their candidate for Congress in Wisconsin's 3rd congressional district over incumbent Democrat and former Wisconsin territorial Governor, James Duane Doty. Rather than retiring, Doty chose to run as an Independent Democrat in the election and easily defeated Hobart.

In 1854 he moved west into Calumet County and became one of the founders of the city of Chilton, Wisconsin. In 1856, he was again the Democratic nominee for Congress in the 3rd district, and was defeated again, this time by Republican incumbent Charles Billinghurst. He was elected to represent the county in the Wisconsin State Assembly for the 1859 session. During this session, he was the author of an act to incorporate a railroad to operate from Milwaukee to Green Bay, which later became part of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad. He was also chosen by the legislature in 1859 as a member of the University of Wisconsin Board of Regents.[2] Hobart was then the Democratic candidate for Governor of Wisconsin in the 1859 election, but was defeated by incumbent Republican Alexander Randall.

American Civil War edit

 
Hobart's sword, made by Tiffany & Co., at Wisconsin Veterans Museum

Hobart enlisted two weeks after the outbreak of the American Civil War and helped raise a company of volunteers for the Union Army from the Chilton area. The company elected him Captain, and called themselves the "Calumet Rifles".[4]

Louisiana Campaign edit

His volunteers were organized into Company K of the 4th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment at Camp Utley in Racine. The regiment mustered into service on July 2, 1861, and traveled to garrison in Maryland.[5] They were attached to the Army of the Gulf and sent to Louisiana to attempt to regain control over the Mississippi River system. Hobart and the 4th Infantry participated in the successful capture of New Orleans and Baton Rouge.

 
Hobart after his promotion to Lt. Colonel

Tennessee edit

In 1862, Hobart left the 4th Infantry to accept promotion to Lieutenant Colonel with the newly organized 21st Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment. The regiment left Wisconsin in September 1862, but Hobart would not rendezvous with them until a month later due to travel time from Louisiana. Before Hobart's arrival, the 21st had marched to join the Army of Ohio, which had been carrying out a defense against the Confederate Heartland Offensive in Kentucky. At the Battle of Perryville the regiment took significant casualties and their commander, Colonel Benjamin Sweet, was wounded.

Hobart met the 21st at Lebanon, Kentucky, shortly after Perryville. The 21st was now organized under Major General William Rosecrans' Army of the Cumberland, engaged in a counter-offensive against Confederate forces in Tennessee. With Colonel Sweet incapacitated, Hobart took command of the regiment and lead them at the battles of Stones River and Hoover's Gap.[5] General Lovell Rousseau, in his report on the battle of Stones River, mentioned Hobart and the 21st for their good conduct. After the Union successes in central Tennessee, the 21st advanced toward Chattanooga with the Army of the Cumberland, eventually pushing into Georgia.[1]

At the Battle of Chickamauga, on September 20, 1863, after a day of heavy fighting, the Union forces were given orders to withdraw. The 21st did not receive the orders and held their position until they noticed other regiments falling back. Hobart ordered the regiment to retreat to the second line of defenses, where they continued to hold until nearly surrounded by Confederate forces. While attempting to break out of this encirclement, Lt. Col. Hobart was wounded and taken prisoner along with about 70 of his regiment. The remainder of the regiment retreated toward Chattanooga.[5]

Escape from Captivity edit

Hobart was sent to Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia.[5] There he helped lead the escape of 109 Union prisoners through a tunnel out of the prison on February 9, 1864.[5] Hobart was tasked with closing off the tunnel after the last escapee had gone through.[6] Roughly half the men made it back to Union lines, including Hobart.

Georgia Campaign edit

Hobart rejoined the 21st Regiment in April 1864 at Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, where they had been stationed since the retreat from Chikamauga. The regiment marched from Lookout Mountain on May 2 to join the Atlanta Campaign, attached to General William Tecumseh Sherman's army. At the Battle of Rocky Face Ridge, the 21st joined in the flanking maneuver that forced the Confederates to abandon their position and fall back toward Resaca. At the Battle of Resaca, the 21st was again engaged in heavy fighting, as their brigade was ordered to assault the enemy fortifications. A few days later, at the Battle of Dallas, the regiment held a defensive position under heavy fire for six days. They received the compliments of their brigade commander, General William Carlin, for their fortitude and gallantry.

The 21st, with its brigade, pursued retreating Confederate forces, engaging them in skirmishes near Big Shanty. They drove a North Carolina regiment from their position, taking captives, and moved into position before Kennesaw Mountain. The regiment received severe bombardment during the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain, but held their ground until Sherman's flanking maneuver forced the enemy to abandon their position. After Kennesaw, Lt. Col. Hobart was assigned to command three regiments of the first Brigade, and Major Michael H. Fitch was assigned to replace him as commander of the 21st Regiment.

After the Battle of Jonesborough, Hobart and the 21st camped at Atlanta in September 1864. The 21st was reinforced by incorporating the remaining forces of the 1st and 10th Wisconsin Regiments. At this time, Lt. Colonel Hobart was also promoted to Colonel and placed in command of the 1st Brigade, 1st Division, XIV Corps.[7][5]

XIV Corps now joined Sherman's Savannah Campaign, his "March to the Sea". Though they did not see significant fighting, they participated in the burning of Marietta, Georgia, and foraged for food and supplies to provision the army during its march. Upon reaching Savannah, on December 21, General Sherman recommended Colonel Hobart for brevet to Brigadier General.

On January 23, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln sent Hobart's nomination for brevet Brigadier General, United States Volunteers, effective retroactively from January 12, 1865, to the United States Senate, which confirmed the award on February 14, 1865.[note 1]

Carolinas Campaign edit

In January, Sherman initiated his Campaign of the Carolinas, and Hobart led his brigade north with General Henry Warner Slocum's left column, engaging in a scorched earth march as they passed north of Columbia, South Carolina, and continued into North Carolina. Hobart's brigade led the advance out of Fayetteville and encountered the enemy, skirmishing with them at the Battle of Averasborough, and then confronting the Confederate counterattack at the Battle of Bentonville. Hobart was conspicuous at Bentonville, leading three regiments of his brigade in repelling the enemy attack. This was their last significant fighting of the war. Hobart's brigade reached Goldsboro, North Carolina, on March 23, and was the first unit to enter Raleigh, on April 13.[8]

Hobart and his brigade remained in Raleigh until the announcement of the end of the war. Hobart was discharged on June 16, 1865.[5]

Postbellum years edit

After the war's end he, again, ran unsuccessfully for Governor of Wisconsin. He served in the State Assembly for a final time in 1867. Later, Hobart served on the Milwaukee Common Council and was president of the common council; he would also serve as acting mayor of Milwaukee.[2] Hobart was the co-author of the book The Citizen Soldier, the autobiography of general John Beatty from 1879. Beside regular mentions it has a chapter written by him dedicated to his time and escape from Libby Prison.[5] He died on January 26, 1902,[4][9] in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and is buried in Forest Home Cemetery.[5]

Personal life and legacy edit

Hobart married Ms. Frances Imogen Lowery, of Troy, New York, on February 2, 1854. She died only a year later, on March 5, 1855. His second wife was Anna Clarence Mower (née Litch), the widow of Samuel F. Mower, a Boston merchant with whom she had two children. Hobart and Mrs. Mower were married on June 8, 1857. Hobart had no known children of his own.[2]

In 1888, Hobart turned over a share of his land in Chilton for use as a city park. The park is named "Hobart Park" in his honor and is part of the current Calumet County Fair Grounds.[10]

Electoral history edit

Wisconsin Senate (1848) edit

Wisconsin Senate, 1st District Special Election, 1848[11]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Special Election, May 8, 1848
Democratic Harrison C. Hobart 567 61.10%
Whig Timothy O. Howe 361 38.90%
Plurality 206 22.20%
Total votes 928 100.0%
Democratic win (new seat)

U.S. House of Representatives (1850) edit

Wisconsin's 3rd Congressional District Election, 1850[12]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
General Election, November 5, 1850
Independent Democrat James Duane Doty (incumbent) 11,159 67.12%
Democratic Harrison C. Hobart 5,371 32.31%
Scattering 95 0.57%
Plurality 5,788 34.82%
Total votes 16,625 100.0% +45.65%
Democratic hold

U.S. House of Representatives (1856) edit

Wisconsin's 3rd Congressional District Election, 1856[13]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
General Election, November 4, 1856
Republican Charles Billinghurst (incumbent) 26,092 52.04% -3.90%
Democratic Harrison C. Hobart 24,045 47.96% +11.96%
Plurality 2,047 4.08% -15.86%
Total votes 50,137 100.0% +109.96%
Republican hold

Wisconsin Governor (1859) edit

Wisconsin Gubernatorial Election, 1859[14]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
General Election, November 8, 1859
Republican Alexander Randall (incumbent) 59,999 53.21% +3.58%
Democratic Harrison C. Hobart 52,539 46.60% -2.53%
Scattering 83 0.07%
Total votes 112,755 100.0% +25.20%
Republican hold

Wisconsin Governor (1865) edit

Wisconsin Gubernatorial Election, 1865[14]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
General Election, November 7, 1865
Republican Lucius Fairchild 58,332 54.68% -4.91%
Democratic Harrison C. Hobart 48,330 45.31% 5.11%
Scattering 12 0.01%
Total votes 106,674 100.0% -12.58%
Republican hold

Wisconsin Assembly (1866) edit

Wisconsin Assembly, Milwaukee 2nd District Election, 1866[15]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
General Election, November 6, 1866
Democratic Harrison C. Hobart 538 61.98%
Republican E. L. Phelps 330 38.02%
Plurality 208 23.96%
Total votes 868 100.0%
Democratic hold

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Hobart, Col. Harrison C. (1815-1902)". Wisconsin Historical Society. 8 August 2017. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Calkins, Elias A. (1903). "Gen. Harrison Carroll Hobart". Proceedings of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Vol. 50. Madison, Wisconsin: Wisconsin Historical Society. pp. 148–160. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  3. ^ "Kappa Kappa Kappa Fraternity. (Dartmouth College) | Dartmouth Library Archives & Manuscripts".
  4. ^ a b "Hero of Civil War Is Dead". Janesville Daily Gazette. January 27, 1902. p. 1. Retrieved March 4, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.  
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Eicher, John H.; Eicher, David J. (2001). Civil War High Commands. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. pp. 299, 748. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  6. ^ Legler, Henry Eduard (1898). "Escape of Wisconsin Officers from Libbey Prison". Leading Events of Wisconsin History: The Story of the State. Milwaukee: The Sentinel Company. pp. 276–279. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  7. ^ "21st Wisconsin Infantry & Their Flag". Forward: Wisconsin's Civil War Battle Flags. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  8. ^ "21st Wisconsin". Second Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry. Retrieved April 28, 2019.
  9. ^ "Gen. Harrison Hobart Dead". The Boston Post. January 27, 1902. p. 1. Retrieved March 4, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.  
  10. ^ "Fair History". Calumet County Fair. Retrieved May 31, 2020.
  11. ^ "Official vote in the county". The Sheboygan Mercury. Sheboygan, Wisconsin. May 28, 1848. p. 2. Retrieved May 31, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ "Wisconsin Congressional election 1850 / Official". Wisconsin Argus. December 17, 1850. p. 2. Retrieved May 31, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ (PDF). Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 5, 2012. Retrieved May 31, 2020.
  14. ^ a b Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau (2005). "Statistics: History" (PDF). In Barish, Lawrence S.; Lemanski, Lynn (eds.). State of Wisconsin 2005-2006 Blue Book (Report). p. 721. ISBN 0-9752820-1-8. Retrieved May 31, 2020.
  15. ^ "Official Canvass of the County of Milwaukee". The Daily Milwaukee News. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. November 16, 1866. p. 5. Retrieved May 31, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Even though Colonel Hobart filled the position of a brigadier general from November 5, 1864, through June 8, 1865, he was appointed only to the honorary grade of brevet brigadier general, not to the actual, substantive grade of brigadier general.[5]

Further reading edit

  • Beatty, J.; The Citizen-Soldier; Wilstach, Baldwin & co.; Cincinnati; 1879 (out of copyright)

External links edit

Military offices
Preceded by Command of the 21st Wisconsin Infantry Regiment
October 8, 1862 – September 20, 1863
Succeeded by
Preceded by Command of the 21st Wisconsin Infantry Regiment
April 1864 – September 1864
Succeeded by
Ltc. Michael H. Fitch
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Wisconsin
1859
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Wisconsin
1865
Succeeded by
Wisconsin State Assembly
Preceded by Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the Sheboygan 1st district
January 1, 1849 – January 7, 1850
Succeeded by
Preceded by
James Robinson
Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the Calumet district
January 3, 1859 – January 2, 1860
Succeeded by
Asaph Green
Preceded by Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the Milwaukee 2nd district
January 7, 1867 – January 6, 1868
Succeeded by
Preceded by Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly
January 10, 1849 – January 7, 1850
Succeeded by
Wisconsin Senate
New state government Member of the Wisconsin Senate from the 1st district
June 5, 1848 – January 1, 1849
Succeeded by

harrison, carroll, hobart, january, 1815, january, 1902, american, lawyer, democratic, politician, union, army, officer, during, american, civil, speaker, wisconsin, state, assembly, served, wisconsin, legislature, member, wisconsin, senate, democratic, nomine. Harrison Carroll Hobart January 31 1815 January 26 1902 was an American lawyer Democratic politician and Union Army officer during the American Civil War He was the 2nd speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly and served in the 1st Wisconsin Legislature as a member of the Wisconsin Senate He was the Democratic nominee for Governor of Wisconsin in 1859 and 1865 Harrison Carroll Hobart2nd Speaker of the Wisconsin AssemblyIn office January 10 1849 January 7 1850Preceded byNinian E WhitesideSucceeded byMoses M StrongMember of the Wisconsin Senate from the 1st districtIn office June 5 1848 January 1 1849Preceded byPosition EstablishedSucceeded byLemuel GoodellMember of the Wisconsin State AssemblyIn office January 7 1867 January 6 1868Preceded byWilliam Pitt LyndeSucceeded byGeorge AbertConstituencyMilwaukee 2nd districtIn office January 3 1859 January 2 1860Preceded byJames RobinsonSucceeded byAsaph GreenConstituencyCalumet districtIn office January 1 1849 January 7 1850Preceded byCharles E MorrisSucceeded byHoratio N SmithConstituencySheboygan 1st districtMember of the House of Representatives of the Wisconsin Territory for Sheboygan and Washington countiesIn office January 4 1847 October 18 1847Preceded byPosition EstablishedSucceeded byBenjamin H MooersPersonal detailsBorn 1815 01 31 January 31 1815Ashburnham MassachusettsDiedJanuary 26 1902 1902 01 26 aged 86 Milwaukee WisconsinResting placeForest Home Cemetery Milwaukee WisconsinPolitical partyDemocraticSpousesFrances Imogen Lowery m 1854 died 1855 wbr Anna Clarence Litch Mower m 1857 died 1896 wbr Alma materDartmouth CollegeProfessionlawyer politicianMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited StatesBranch serviceUnited States VolunteersUnion ArmyYears of service1861 1865RankColonel USVBrevet Brig General USVUnit4th Reg Wis Vol InfantryCommands21st Reg Wis Vol Infantry1st Bde 1st Div XIV CorpsBattles warsAmerican Civil War Lower Seaboard Theater Capture of New Orleans Battle of Baton Rouge 1862 Stones River Campaign Battle of Stones River Tullahoma Campaign Battle of Hoover s Gap Chickamauga Campaign Battle of Chickamauga Atlanta Campaign Battle of Rocky Face Ridge Battle of Resaca Battle of Dallas Battle of Kennesaw Mountain Battle of Peachtree Creek Battle of Jonesborough Savannah Campaign Campaign of the Carolinas Battle of Averasborough Battle of Bentonville Contents 1 Early life 2 Wisconsin 3 American Civil War 3 1 Louisiana Campaign 3 2 Tennessee 3 3 Escape from Captivity 3 4 Georgia Campaign 3 5 Carolinas Campaign 4 Postbellum years 5 Personal life and legacy 6 Electoral history 6 1 Wisconsin Senate 1848 6 2 U S House of Representatives 1850 6 3 U S House of Representatives 1856 6 4 Wisconsin Governor 1859 6 5 Wisconsin Governor 1865 6 6 Wisconsin Assembly 1866 7 See also 8 References 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life editHarrison Carroll Hobart was born on January 31 1815 in Ashburnham Massachusetts 1 He was raised on his father s farm and received little formal education in his youth At age 16 he moved to New Hampshire and worked as an apprentice for three years in the print shop of John Randall Reding He earned enough to obtain additional schooling at Concord Literary Institute and New Hampton Academy 2 He entered Dartmouth College in 1838 and graduated in 1842 supporting himself through college by teaching at the Rochester Academy While attending Dartmouth he became one of the founders of the Kappa Kappa Kappa fraternity along with two of his closest companions Judge Stephen Gordon Nash and John Dudley Philbrick all Class of 1842 3 Hobart was motivated by a spirit of resistance to class oligarchy and social privilege thus imbued this spirit into the new organization After leaving Dartmouth he studied law in Boston in the office of Robert Rantoul Jr and was admitted to the Massachusetts bar in 1845 2 Wisconsin editHe moved to the Wisconsin Territory the following year and settled near Sheboygan on the coast of Lake Michigan He quickly became a prominent lawyer in the area and became involved in local politics as a member of the Democratic Party 2 In 1847 Hobart served in the Wisconsin Territorial House of Representatives the lower house of the territory s Legislative Assembly After Wisconsin became a state he was elected to represent Wisconsin s 1st State Senate district Brown Calumet Manitowoc and Sheboygan counties in the 1st Wisconsin Legislature meeting in 1848 In the fall of 1848 he was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly for 1849 and was chosen as Speaker by the Assembly membership at the start of the session 2 His old Senate seat was taken by fellow Democrat Lemuel Goodell In 1850 he was nominated by the Democratic Party to be their candidate for Congress in Wisconsin s 3rd congressional district over incumbent Democrat and former Wisconsin territorial Governor James Duane Doty Rather than retiring Doty chose to run as an Independent Democrat in the election and easily defeated Hobart In 1854 he moved west into Calumet County and became one of the founders of the city of Chilton Wisconsin In 1856 he was again the Democratic nominee for Congress in the 3rd district and was defeated again this time by Republican incumbent Charles Billinghurst He was elected to represent the county in the Wisconsin State Assembly for the 1859 session During this session he was the author of an act to incorporate a railroad to operate from Milwaukee to Green Bay which later became part of the Chicago Milwaukee St Paul and Pacific Railroad He was also chosen by the legislature in 1859 as a member of the University of Wisconsin Board of Regents 2 Hobart was then the Democratic candidate for Governor of Wisconsin in the 1859 election but was defeated by incumbent Republican Alexander Randall American Civil War edit nbsp Hobart s sword made by Tiffany amp Co at Wisconsin Veterans Museum Hobart enlisted two weeks after the outbreak of the American Civil War and helped raise a company of volunteers for the Union Army from the Chilton area The company elected him Captain and called themselves the Calumet Rifles 4 Louisiana Campaign edit His volunteers were organized into Company K of the 4th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment at Camp Utley in Racine The regiment mustered into service on July 2 1861 and traveled to garrison in Maryland 5 They were attached to the Army of the Gulf and sent to Louisiana to attempt to regain control over the Mississippi River system Hobart and the 4th Infantry participated in the successful capture of New Orleans and Baton Rouge nbsp Hobart after his promotion to Lt Colonel Tennessee edit In 1862 Hobart left the 4th Infantry to accept promotion to Lieutenant Colonel with the newly organized 21st Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment The regiment left Wisconsin in September 1862 but Hobart would not rendezvous with them until a month later due to travel time from Louisiana Before Hobart s arrival the 21st had marched to join the Army of Ohio which had been carrying out a defense against the Confederate Heartland Offensive in Kentucky At the Battle of Perryville the regiment took significant casualties and their commander Colonel Benjamin Sweet was wounded Hobart met the 21st at Lebanon Kentucky shortly after Perryville The 21st was now organized under Major General William Rosecrans Army of the Cumberland engaged in a counter offensive against Confederate forces in Tennessee With Colonel Sweet incapacitated Hobart took command of the regiment and lead them at the battles of Stones River and Hoover s Gap 5 General Lovell Rousseau in his report on the battle of Stones River mentioned Hobart and the 21st for their good conduct After the Union successes in central Tennessee the 21st advanced toward Chattanooga with the Army of the Cumberland eventually pushing into Georgia 1 At the Battle of Chickamauga on September 20 1863 after a day of heavy fighting the Union forces were given orders to withdraw The 21st did not receive the orders and held their position until they noticed other regiments falling back Hobart ordered the regiment to retreat to the second line of defenses where they continued to hold until nearly surrounded by Confederate forces While attempting to break out of this encirclement Lt Col Hobart was wounded and taken prisoner along with about 70 of his regiment The remainder of the regiment retreated toward Chattanooga 5 Escape from Captivity edit Hobart was sent to Libby Prison in Richmond Virginia 5 There he helped lead the escape of 109 Union prisoners through a tunnel out of the prison on February 9 1864 5 Hobart was tasked with closing off the tunnel after the last escapee had gone through 6 Roughly half the men made it back to Union lines including Hobart Georgia Campaign edit Hobart rejoined the 21st Regiment in April 1864 at Lookout Mountain Tennessee where they had been stationed since the retreat from Chikamauga The regiment marched from Lookout Mountain on May 2 to join the Atlanta Campaign attached to General William Tecumseh Sherman s army At the Battle of Rocky Face Ridge the 21st joined in the flanking maneuver that forced the Confederates to abandon their position and fall back toward Resaca At the Battle of Resaca the 21st was again engaged in heavy fighting as their brigade was ordered to assault the enemy fortifications A few days later at the Battle of Dallas the regiment held a defensive position under heavy fire for six days They received the compliments of their brigade commander General William Carlin for their fortitude and gallantry The 21st with its brigade pursued retreating Confederate forces engaging them in skirmishes near Big Shanty They drove a North Carolina regiment from their position taking captives and moved into position before Kennesaw Mountain The regiment received severe bombardment during the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain but held their ground until Sherman s flanking maneuver forced the enemy to abandon their position After Kennesaw Lt Col Hobart was assigned to command three regiments of the first Brigade and Major Michael H Fitch was assigned to replace him as commander of the 21st Regiment After the Battle of Jonesborough Hobart and the 21st camped at Atlanta in September 1864 The 21st was reinforced by incorporating the remaining forces of the 1st and 10th Wisconsin Regiments At this time Lt Colonel Hobart was also promoted to Colonel and placed in command of the 1st Brigade 1st Division XIV Corps 7 5 XIV Corps now joined Sherman s Savannah Campaign his March to the Sea Though they did not see significant fighting they participated in the burning of Marietta Georgia and foraged for food and supplies to provision the army during its march Upon reaching Savannah on December 21 General Sherman recommended Colonel Hobart for brevet to Brigadier General On January 23 1865 President Abraham Lincoln sent Hobart s nomination for brevet Brigadier General United States Volunteers effective retroactively from January 12 1865 to the United States Senate which confirmed the award on February 14 1865 note 1 Carolinas Campaign edit In January Sherman initiated his Campaign of the Carolinas and Hobart led his brigade north with General Henry Warner Slocum s left column engaging in a scorched earth march as they passed north of Columbia South Carolina and continued into North Carolina Hobart s brigade led the advance out of Fayetteville and encountered the enemy skirmishing with them at the Battle of Averasborough and then confronting the Confederate counterattack at the Battle of Bentonville Hobart was conspicuous at Bentonville leading three regiments of his brigade in repelling the enemy attack This was their last significant fighting of the war Hobart s brigade reached Goldsboro North Carolina on March 23 and was the first unit to enter Raleigh on April 13 8 Hobart and his brigade remained in Raleigh until the announcement of the end of the war Hobart was discharged on June 16 1865 5 Postbellum years editAfter the war s end he again ran unsuccessfully for Governor of Wisconsin He served in the State Assembly for a final time in 1867 Later Hobart served on the Milwaukee Common Council and was president of the common council he would also serve as acting mayor of Milwaukee 2 Hobart was the co author of the book The Citizen Soldier the autobiography of general John Beatty from 1879 Beside regular mentions it has a chapter written by him dedicated to his time and escape from Libby Prison 5 He died on January 26 1902 4 9 in Milwaukee Wisconsin and is buried in Forest Home Cemetery 5 Personal life and legacy editHobart married Ms Frances Imogen Lowery of Troy New York on February 2 1854 She died only a year later on March 5 1855 His second wife was Anna Clarence Mower nee Litch the widow of Samuel F Mower a Boston merchant with whom she had two children Hobart and Mrs Mower were married on June 8 1857 Hobart had no known children of his own 2 In 1888 Hobart turned over a share of his land in Chilton for use as a city park The park is named Hobart Park in his honor and is part of the current Calumet County Fair Grounds 10 Electoral history editWisconsin Senate 1848 edit Wisconsin Senate 1st District Special Election 1848 11 Party Candidate Votes Special Election May 8 1848 Democratic Harrison C Hobart 567 61 10 Whig Timothy O Howe 361 38 90 Plurality 206 22 20 Total votes 928 100 0 Democratic win new seat U S House of Representatives 1850 edit Wisconsin s 3rd Congressional District Election 1850 12 Party Candidate Votes General Election November 5 1850 Independent Democrat James Duane Doty incumbent 11 159 67 12 Democratic Harrison C Hobart 5 371 32 31 Scattering 95 0 57 Plurality 5 788 34 82 Total votes 16 625 100 0 45 65 Democratic hold U S House of Representatives 1856 edit Wisconsin s 3rd Congressional District Election 1856 13 Party Candidate Votes General Election November 4 1856 Republican Charles Billinghurst incumbent 26 092 52 04 3 90 Democratic Harrison C Hobart 24 045 47 96 11 96 Plurality 2 047 4 08 15 86 Total votes 50 137 100 0 109 96 Republican hold Wisconsin Governor 1859 edit Wisconsin Gubernatorial Election 1859 14 Party Candidate Votes General Election November 8 1859 Republican Alexander Randall incumbent 59 999 53 21 3 58 Democratic Harrison C Hobart 52 539 46 60 2 53 Scattering 83 0 07 Total votes 112 755 100 0 25 20 Republican hold Wisconsin Governor 1865 edit Wisconsin Gubernatorial Election 1865 14 Party Candidate Votes General Election November 7 1865 Republican Lucius Fairchild 58 332 54 68 4 91 Democratic Harrison C Hobart 48 330 45 31 5 11 Scattering 12 0 01 Total votes 106 674 100 0 12 58 Republican hold Wisconsin Assembly 1866 edit Wisconsin Assembly Milwaukee 2nd District Election 1866 15 Party Candidate Votes General Election November 6 1866 Democratic Harrison C Hobart 538 61 98 Republican E L Phelps 330 38 02 Plurality 208 23 96 Total votes 868 100 0 Democratic holdSee also editList of kidnappings List of solved missing person casesReferences edit a b Hobart Col Harrison C 1815 1902 Wisconsin Historical Society 8 August 2017 Retrieved May 30 2020 a b c d e f g Calkins Elias A 1903 Gen Harrison Carroll Hobart Proceedings of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin Vol 50 Madison Wisconsin Wisconsin Historical Society pp 148 160 Retrieved May 30 2020 Kappa Kappa Kappa Fraternity Dartmouth College Dartmouth Library Archives amp Manuscripts a b Hero of Civil War Is Dead Janesville Daily Gazette January 27 1902 p 1 Retrieved March 4 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c d e f g h i j Eicher John H Eicher David J 2001 Civil War High Commands Stanford California Stanford University Press pp 299 748 ISBN 0 8047 3641 3 Retrieved May 30 2020 Legler Henry Eduard 1898 Escape of Wisconsin Officers from Libbey Prison Leading Events of Wisconsin History The Story of the State Milwaukee The Sentinel Company pp 276 279 Retrieved May 30 2020 21st Wisconsin Infantry amp Their Flag Forward Wisconsin s Civil War Battle Flags Retrieved May 30 2020 21st Wisconsin Second Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Retrieved April 28 2019 Gen Harrison Hobart Dead The Boston Post January 27 1902 p 1 Retrieved March 4 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Fair History Calumet County Fair Retrieved May 31 2020 Official vote in the county The Sheboygan Mercury Sheboygan Wisconsin May 28 1848 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2020 via Newspapers com Wisconsin Congressional election 1850 Official Wisconsin Argus December 17 1850 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2020 via Newspapers com Wisconsin U S House Election Results PDF Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs Archived from the original PDF on April 5 2012 Retrieved May 31 2020 a b Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau 2005 Statistics History PDF In Barish Lawrence S Lemanski Lynn eds State of Wisconsin 2005 2006 Blue Book Report p 721 ISBN 0 9752820 1 8 Retrieved May 31 2020 Official Canvass of the County of Milwaukee The Daily Milwaukee News Milwaukee Wisconsin November 16 1866 p 5 Retrieved May 31 2020 via Newspapers com Notes edit Even though Colonel Hobart filled the position of a brigadier general from November 5 1864 through June 8 1865 he was appointed only to the honorary grade of brevet brigadier general not to the actual substantive grade of brigadier general 5 Further reading editBeatty J The Citizen Soldier Wilstach Baldwin amp co Cincinnati 1879 out of copyright External links edit Harrison Carroll Hobart Find a Grave Retrieved 2014 02 09 Hobart Col Harrison C 1815 1902 at Wisconsin Historical Society Military offices Preceded byCol Benjamin Sweet Command of the 21st Wisconsin Infantry RegimentOctober 8 1862 September 20 1863 Succeeded byCpt Charles H Walker Preceded byCpt Charles H Walker Command of the 21st Wisconsin Infantry RegimentApril 1864 September 1864 Succeeded byLtc Michael H Fitch Party political offices Preceded byJames B Cross Democratic nominee for Governor of Wisconsin1859 Succeeded byBenjamin Ferguson Preceded byHenry L Palmer Democratic nominee for Governor of Wisconsin1865 Succeeded byJohn J Tallmadge Wisconsin State Assembly Preceded byCharles E Morris Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the Sheboygan 1st districtJanuary 1 1849 January 7 1850 Succeeded byHoratio N Smith Preceded byJames Robinson Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the Calumet districtJanuary 3 1859 January 2 1860 Succeeded byAsaph Green Preceded byWilliam Pitt Lynde Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the Milwaukee 2nd districtJanuary 7 1867 January 6 1868 Succeeded byGeorge Abert Preceded byNinian E Whiteside Speaker of the Wisconsin State AssemblyJanuary 10 1849 January 7 1850 Succeeded byMoses M Strong Wisconsin Senate New state government Member of the Wisconsin Senate from the 1st districtJune 5 1848 January 1 1849 Succeeded byLemuel Goodell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harrison Carroll Hobart amp oldid 1209052675, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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