Lyman G. Hinckley Explained

Lyman G. Hinckley
Office1:30th Lieutenant Governor of Vermont
Term Start1:October 8, 1874
Term End1:October 5, 1876
Governor1:Asahel Peck
Predecessor1:Russell S. Taft
Successor1:Redfield Proctor
Office2:President pro tempore of the Vermont Senate
Term Start2:1872
Term End2:1874
Predecessor2:Charles H. Heath
Successor2:Redfield Proctor
Office3:Member of the Vermont Senate from Orange County
Term Start3:1872
Term End3:1874
Alongside3:William R. Shedd
Predecessor3:Heman A. White
Harry H. Niles
Successor3:John W. Rowell
William T. George
Office4:Member of the Vermont House of Representatives from Chelsea
Term Start4:1878
Term End4:1882
Predecessor4:Burnham Martin
Successor4:Joseph P. Tracy
Term Start5:1868
Term End5:1870
Predecessor5:Carlos Moore
Successor5:William Hebard
Term Start6:1862
Term End6:1864
Predecessor6:William F. Dickinson
Successor6:William Hebard
Birth Date:13 April 1832
Birth Place:Post Mills, Vermont, U.S.
Death Place:Boston, Massachusetts U.S.
Resting Place:Highland Cemetery, Chelsea, Vermont
Party:Republican
Spouse:Mary Sybil Henry (m. 1861-1874, her death)
Children:1
Relations:William Wirt Henry (brother-in-law)
George Albert Clough (brother-in-law)
Profession:Attorney
Public official
Allegiance:United States (Union)
Branch:Vermont Militia
Branch Label:Service
Serviceyears:1865–1866
Rank:First Lieutenant
Unit:2nd Brigade, 1st Division
Battles:American Civil War
Battles Label:Wars

Lyman Gillett Hinckley (April 13, 1832  - November 26, 1887) was a lawyer and politician who served as the 30th lieutenant governor of Vermont from 1874 to 1876.

Early life

Lyman Gillett Hinckley was born in the Post Mills area of Thetford, Vermont on April 13, 1832, a son of Lyman Hinckley and Phebe (Gillett) Hinckley.[1] [2] [3] His father was a noted anti-slavery activist and served in local offices including assistant judge of the Orange County court.

Hinckley attended the schools of Thetford and graduated from Thetford Academy in 1851. In 1852, he began attendance at Dartmouth College while teaching school and selling books and newspaper subscriptions door-to-door to pay his tuition. He graduated in 1856, and moved to Chelsea. Hinckley studied law with William Hebard and Burnham Martin and was admitted to the bar in 1860. Hinckley did not actively practice law, preferring instead to concentrate on his duties as county clerk.

Political career

A Republican, from 1856 to 1859 he was Assistant Clerk of the Vermont House of Representatives, and he was Clerk of Orange County, Vermont from 1860 until his death. Hinckley served as a Town of Chelsea Justice of the Peace and Town Meeting Moderator, also serving in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1862 to 1864 and 1868 to 1870. After the October 1864 St. Albans Raid, the northernmost action of the American Civil War, Vermont created a militia division to aid in border security. Hinckley joined the 2nd Brigade as judge advocate with the rank of first lieutenant, and he served from April 1865 until the militia was discharged in 1866.[4]

From 1872 to 1874 he served in the Vermont Senate and was chosen to serve as President pro tem. He was then elected Lieutenant Governor and served one term, 1874 to 1876. In 1878 and 1880 he returned to the Vermont House of Representatives.

Death and burial

Hinckley died suddenly on November 26, 1887 while in Boston to visit his sisters for Thanksgiving. He was buried at Highland Cemetery in Chelsea.[5]

Family

In 1861, Hinckley married Mary Sybil Henry of Waterbury, Vermont, the sister of William Wirt Henry. They had a daughter, Hattie, who died in 1872 at age eight. Mary Hinckley died in 1874, and Lyman Hinckley never remarried.

Hinckley's sister Amelia was the wife of architect George Albert Clough.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vermont Vital Records, 1720-1908, Death Entry for Lyman G. Hinkley . 1887 . Ancestry.com . Ancestry.com, LLC . Lehi, UT . April 9, 2020 . subscription . .
  2. Hebard . Salmon B. . October 23, 1888 . A Memorial Sketch of Lyman Gillett Hinckley . Vermont Bar Association: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting . 2 . 1 . Barre, VT . Thomas H. Cave . 143 . . .
  3. Book: Child, Hamilton . 1888 . Gazetteer of Orange County, Vt., 1762-1888, Part 1 . Syracuse, NY . Syracuse Journal Company . 101 . . .
  4. Book: Washburn, Peter T. . Peter T. Washburn . 1865 . Report of the Adjutant & Inspector General of the State of Vermont . Montpelier, Vermont . Walton's Steam Printing Establishment . G-13 . Google Books.
  5. Web site: Village Cemeteries: Highland Cemetery . Chelsea Vermont Cemeteries . Rootsweb.com . November 15, 2024.
  6. Book: Toomey, Daniel P. . Quinn . Thomas C. . 1892 . Massachusetts of Today . Boston, Massachusetts . Columbia Publishing Company . 230 . Google Books.