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book:263.thomas_hart [2008/11/06 00:56] – created berlin05book:263.thomas_hart [2014/11/01 15:00] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1
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-Thomas Hart Seymour (1807–1868)+[[262.thomas_s|(<-- 262. Thomas S.(7) Seymour)]] [[start|(Back to Start)]] [[264.william_ellery|(264. William Ellery(7) Seymour -->)]]
  
-He served as Governor of Connecticut from 1850 to 1853 and as Minister to Russia from 1853 to 1858+====== 263. Gov. Thomas Hart Seymour ====== 
 + 
 +//Note: See also: [[wp>Thomas_H._Seymour|Thomas H. Seymour (Wikipedia)]].// 
 + 
 +263. Gov. THOMAS HART<sup>7</sup> SEYMOUR (//[[174.henry|Henry]]//<sup>6</sup>, 
 +//[[083.thomas|Thomas]]//<sup>5</sup>, //[[028.thomas|Thomas]]//<sup>4</sup>, 
 +//[[009.Thomas|Thomas]]//<sup>3</sup>, //[[003.John|John]]//<sup>2</sup>, 
 +//[[001.Richard|Richard]]//<sup>1</sup>), born at Hartford, Conn., 29 Sept. 
 +1807, died there 3 Sept. 1868, unmarried. He was certainly named Thomas Henry 
 +Seymour, but his name appears in most reference works as Thomas Hart Seymour, 
 +and he may have changed his middle name. A discussion of this question will be 
 +found in Appendix X. 
 + 
 +He was educated in the public schools of Hartford, and in 1829 was graduated 
 +from Capt. Alden Partridge’s Military Institute, Middletown, Conn. He became 
 +editor of a Democratic paper, //The Jeffersonian//, as early as 1832, but was at 
 +the same time studying law, and was admitted to the Bar about 1833. He was also 
 +active in military affairs and was chosen Captain of the Hartford Light Guard. 
 + 
 +His attractive personality, said to have been without equal in the State, and 
 +his popular manners and address, soon threw him into politics, and he was 
 +elected as a Democrat to the Twenty-eighth Congress (4 Mar. 1843 to 3 Mar. 
 +1845). He declined renomination. 
 + 
 +He was commissioned Major of Conn. Infantry, 16 Mar. 1847, and of the 9th U.S. 
 +Infantry, 9 Apr. 1847. The latter was the New England regiment of volunteers 
 +raised for service in the Mexican War, with Col. Truman Bishop Ransom of Vermont 
 +as its commander. On 13 Oct. 1847, Col. Ransom fell in the assault on 
 +Chapultepec. This was a fortress, the key to the City of Mexico, built upon a 
 +rock 150 feet high, impregnable on the north, and nearly so on the eastern and 
 +most of the southern face. Only the western and portions of the southern sides 
 +could be scaled. At a council of the commanders, two picked American regiments 
 +were selected to perform this task. One of them was "Tom" Seymour’s, and they 
 +pushed up the rugged steeps in the face of a withering fire. The walls at the 
 +base of this castle fortress had to be mounted by ladders. When Col. Ransom fell 
 +early in the assault, Seymour led the troops, scaled the heights and, with his 
 +command, was the first to enter the supposedly impregnable fortress. 
 + 
 +Seymour, who had been promoted to Lieut.-Colonel, 12 Aug. 1847, was promoted to 
 +command of the regiment, brevet Colonel "for gallant and meritorious conduct in 
 +the battle of Chapultepec," and took part in the capture of Mexico. He was 
 +honorably mustered out, 25 July 1848. 
 + 
 +His popularity enhanced by his conduct in the Mexican War, the "Hero of 
 +Chapultepec" was nominated for Governor of Connecticut in 1849, but though 
 +gaining largely over the Democratic vote the preceding year, was not elected. In 
 +1850 he was again a candidate and was elected by a handsome majority; and he was 
 +re-elected in 1851, 1852, and 1853. In 1852 he was Presidential Elector on the 
 +Pierce and King ticket, and in 1853 President Pierce appointed him U.S. 
 +Minister to Russia. Resigning the governorship, he accepted that post and filled 
 +it for four years. He formed a warm personal friendship for both the Czar 
 +Nicholas and his son, and received from them many costly tokens of their regard, 
 +including a handsome malachite table, which the author recalls viewing with awe 
 +when it was in the rooms of the Connecticut Historical Society. A pair of small, 
 +delicate, silver spurs, worn by "Governor Tom," are preserved by the author with 
 +many souvenirs of the Hale Family at the "Birthplace" in Coventry, Conn. 
 + 
 +While Minister to Russia, his Attache was the Hon. Andrew D. White, from whom we 
 +obtained the following anecdotes in 1905. Mr. White was greatly attached to Gov. 
 +Seymour, whose rare charm of manner, warmth of heart, and eagerness to serve 
 +others, had made a deep impression on him. He told of one occasion when an 
 +American gentleman and his wife, to whom Gov. Seymour was under no obligation, 
 +found themselves stranded in St. Petersburg. Gov. Seymour took them into his 
 +house, and on the lady’s account surrendered to them his own apartment, moving 
 +himself into a small, uncomfortable room in the back of the house, and not 
 +permitting any of his staff to give up their rooms. At one time, it was proposed 
 +that Mr. White should be initiated into some of the degrees of Masonry, Seymour 
 +and the rest of the company present being Masons. Gov. Seymour fell in with this 
 +proposal until he remembered that Masonry was forbidden in Russia, whereupon he 
 +took a firm stand and declined to participate, as he would not contravene the 
 +laws of Russia even though the house of the U.S. Minister enjoyed diplomatic 
 +immunity. 
 + 
 +After nearly a year of foreign travel, Seymour returned to the United States in 
 +1858. When the Civil War began, he opposed military measures against the South, 
 +and throughout the War was > the leader of the Connecticut Peace Democrats. He 
 +declined an invitation to act as vice-president of a war meeting held in 
 +Hartford 10 July 1862, and his remarks in his letter of refusal were used to 
 +injure him politically. He declined because the meeting "is one which ignores 
 +peaceful remedies of any sort as a means of restoring the Union, and calls 
 +loudly for men and means to aid in the subjugation and consequent degradation 
 +and overthrow of the South." His attitude made him the object of bitter attack, 
 +and in 1862 Orville H. Platt, then a member of the Lower House, climbed a step- 
 +ladder and turned his portrait in the Senate Chamber to the wall. It so remained 
 +turned to the wall until after the end of the war. Platt by this act acquired 
 +the name of "Portrait Platt." Years afterwards he had a notable career as one of 
 +the U.S. Senators from Connecticut. This identical portrait, illustrated 
 +herein, now hangs in the Memorial Hall in the State Library in Hartford, in its 
 +appropriate place in the line of Governors of Connecticut. 
 + 
 +Seymour ran as Democratic candidate for Governor in 1863, and one opposition 
 +newspaper went so far as to print in parallel columns passages from Arnold’s 
 +"Proclamation" of 1780 and passages from the Democratic Platform of 1863 and 
 +from a speech of Seymour’s, with the comment, "Benedict Arnold and Thomas H. 
 +Seymour are alike in expression of their desire for peace." A bitter campaign 
 +ended in his defeat by the Republican candidate, William A. Buckingham. 
 + 
 +Mr. Seymour did not again enter the political arena. Although the popularity of 
 +the "Hero of Chapultepec" with the masses was in large measure sacrificed as a 
 +result of his attitude of conciliation with the South during the Civil War, many 
 +devoted friends remained loyal to him. He was firm and sincere in his 
 +convictions, even though it meant the end of his public career. Who can say, 
 +whether or not his was the wider vision? Or whether a spirit of compromise and 
 +conciliation on both sides might not have restored a united country, without the 
 +scars left by the defeat of the South? History can tell only what occurred, not 
 +what might have been. Perchance it took more courage for "Governor Tom" to swim 
 +against the tide of popular passion during the Civil War than was required to 
 +first scale the heights of Chapultepec. 
 + 
 +\\ [[262.thomas_s|(<-- 262. Thomas S.(7) Seymour)]] [[start|(Back to Start)]] [[264.william_ellery|(264. William Ellery(7) Seymour -->)]]
  
-Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_H._Seymour 
book/263.thomas_hart.1225954615.txt.gz · Last modified: 2008/11/06 00:56 (external edit)