Abram
Hammond
Brookville, Franklin County, Indiana
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Subject:
Abram
Hammond
Erected by:
Franklin County Historical Society
Located:
300 Block of Main Street, Brookville,
Indiana
| Text: | Mar. 21 1814-Aug. 27, 1874 Governor of Indiana, 1860-1861. Lived on this site as a boy in the "old Yellow Tavern" part of which was a blockhouse erected 1808 |
| History: | Abram
Hammond was born in Vermont and came to Brookville, Indiana, when he was six
years old. After attending the common schools he studied law and practiced in
Greenfield and Columbus. A restless man all his life, he moved to Cincinnati in
1847 and practiced there until 1849, and, again after a few years in Indiana, in
1852 Hammond set out for San Francisco and practiced law with a prominent firm
for three years. He later moved back to Indianapolis where he served as judge of
the court of common pleas for Marion County. When Willard died in
office in October, 1860, Hammond served out the remaining three months of
Willard's term as governor. Medium-sized
and compactly built, Hammond had a poker face and a self-contained manner.
Contemporary observers wondered how he managed to build a law practice, since he
was "not content to sit in his office and wait for a client." Soon
after his term was over Hammond was severely afflicted with rheumatism and
asthma, and he died in Denver, Colorado, in 1874. Source: Peat, Wilbur D. Portraits and
Painters of the Governors of Indiana 1800-1978. Revised, edited and
with new entries by Diane Gail Lazarus, Indianapolis Museum of Art.
Biographies of the governors by Lana Ruegamer, Indiana Historical Society.
Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society and Indianapolis Museum of Art,
1978.
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