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Henry Hammond

 
Biography: James Henry Hammond
 

James Henry Hammond (1807-1864) was governor of South Carolina and a U.S. senator. He was a radical proponent of the doctrine of states' rights.

James Henry Hammond was born on Nov. 17, 1807, in the Newberry district of South Carolina. After graduating from South Carolina College (now the University of South Carolina), he established a successful law practice in Columbia. In 1831 he married Catherine E. Fitzsimmons, an heiress, and moved to a large cotton plantation on the Savannah River.

In 1832 Senator John C. Calhoun of South Carolina, outraged by new tariffs, engineered a state convention that passed an ordinance nullifying the federal policies and preparing the state for armed resistance to federal attempts to enforce them. During this crisis Hammond took an extreme position, advocating secession from the Union if the tariff was not repealed. As a member of the House of Representatives from 1834 to 1836, Hammond bitterly attacked the abolitionists, whom he felt should be subject to the death penalty.

During his term as governor from 1842 to 1844, Hammond converted the Citadel at Charleston, S.C., into a military academy, advocated public education, and conducted a state agricultural survey. He again urged the legislature to secede rather than accept tariff increases. This proposal, originated by Robert Barnwell Rhett, was blocked by Calhoun, whose supporters persuaded the legislature to follow a more moderate course. In 1850 Hammond attended the Nashville Convention of Southern States as a secessionist.

Hammond's unwillingness to ally himself with either the Rhett or Calhoun factions prevented him from becoming a senator until 1857. During his term as senator, to the dismay of South Carolinians, he abandoned his secessionist views, for he had become convinced since 1850 that most Southerners had no desire to leave the Union as long as their rights were protected. He now urged Southerners to make concessions to Northern antislavery opinion, for he felt that Southern intransigence played into the hands of the abolitionists. His moderate views and his condemnation of proposals to reopen the slave trade lost him popularity at home. He did not favor secession after Abraham Lincoln's election for he saw no threat to Southern rights, but, yielding to pressure, he resigned from the Senate.

During the Civil War ill health kept Hammond from participating actively in Confederate politics, apart from one unsuccessful effort to persuade the Confederate government to make cotton the basis of credit. He died on Nov. 13, 1864, leaving an estate that included more than 300 slaves.

Further Reading

Elizabeth Merritt, James Henry Hammond, 1807-1864 (1923), is a study of the man and his time. Charles Edward Cauthen, South Carolina Goes to War, 1860-1865 (1950), describes Hammond's early views on secession. See also Chauncey Samuel Boucher, The Nullification Controversy in South Carolina (1916).

Additional Sources

Faust, Drew Gilpin., James Henry Hammond and the Old South: a design for mastery, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1982.

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English Folklore: Henry Edward Denison Hammond
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(1866-1910)

And Hammond, Robert Francis Frederick (1868-?). The Hammond Brothers are remembered for their folk-song collecting in Dorset, which they undertook at the suggestion of Lucy Broadwood. Henry had been introduced to folk-song by George B. Gardiner, and he assisted the latter on some of his own trips, noting the tunes for which Gardiner was not sufficiently well trained. The Hammonds struck out on their own, and between 1904 and 1907 they noted 648 songs, the manuscripts for which are now in the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library. A selection of their songs appeared in the JFSS 3 (1907), 59-139; their own Folk Songs from Dorset (1908), and (texts only) in James Reeves, The Everlasting Circle (1960); also Frank Purslow's Marrowbones (1965), The Wanton Seed (1968), The Constant Lovers (1972), The Foggy Dew (1974).

Bibliography
The full bibliography list is available here.

  • Frank Purslow, FMJ 1: 4 (1968), 236-64
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: James Henry Hammond
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Hammond, James Henry, 1807–64, American statesman, b. Newberry co., S.C. A lawyer and the owner of large plantations on the Savannah River, Hammond was an early believer in secession. He voiced this belief in the U.S. House of Representatives (1835–36) and as governor of South Carolina (1842–44) during the turmoil of the tariff of 1842. In 1857, Hammond was elected to the U.S. Senate and there, in reply to William Seward, made his famous “Cotton is King” speech. As the crisis approached, however, he began to doubt the wisdom of secession, thinking the South could attain its desired ends within the Union. He later supported the Confederacy, however, although he criticized the government of Jefferson Davis.

Bibliography

See biography by E. Merritt (1923); study by R. C. Cinnamond (1959).

 
Wikipedia: Henry Hammond
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Henry Hammond (18 August 1605 - 25 April 1660), was an English churchman.

Contents

Early life

He was born at Chertsey in Surrey, and was educated at Eton College and at Magdalen College, Oxford, becoming demy or scholar in 1619, and fellow in 1625. He took Holy Orders in 1629, and in 1633 in preaching before the court he won the approval of Robert Sidney, 2nd Earl of Leicester and was presented with the living of Penshurst in Kent.[1] He undertook the education of William Temple, and supported the education of the antiquary William Fulman.[2]

Royalist cleric

In 1643 he was made archdeacon of Chichester. He was a member of the convocation of 1640, and was nominated one of the Westminster Assembly. Instead of sitting in parliament, he took part in the unsuccessful rising at Tonbridge in favour of King Charles I, and was obliged to flee in disguise to Oxford, then the royal headquarters.

There he spent much of his time writing, though he accompanied the king's commissioners to London, and afterwards to the ineffectual convention at Uxbridge in 1645, where he disputed with Richard Vines, one of the parliamentary envoys. In his absence he was appointed canon of Christ Church, Oxford and public orator of the university. These dignities he relinquished for a time in order to attend the king as chaplain during his captivity in the hands of the parliament. When Charles was deprived of all his loyal attendants at Christmas 1647, Hammond returned to Oxford and was made subdean of Christ Church, only, however, to be removed from all his offices by the parliamentary visitors, who imprisoned him for ten weeks.

Afterwards he was permitted, though still under quasi-confinement, to live at the house of Philip Warwick at Clapham in Bedfordshire. In 1650, now free, Hammond betook himself to the friendly mansion of Sir John Pakington, at Westwood, in Worcestershire, where he died on the eve of his promotion to Bishop of Worcester. Hammond was held in high esteem even by his opponents. He was an excellent preacher; Charles I pronounced him the most natural orator he had ever heard.

Works

His writings, published in 4 volumes. fol. (1674 - 1684), consist mostly of controversial sermons and tracts. The Anglo-Catholic Library contains four volumes of his Miscellaneous Theological Works (1847 - 1850). The best of them are his Practical Catechism, first published in 1644; his Paraphrase and Annotations on the New Testament; and an incomplete work of a similar nature on the Old Testament. His Life, a delightful piece of biography, written by Bishop John Fell, and prefixed to the collected Works, was reprinted in vol. iv. of Wordsworth's Ecclesiastical Biography.

He read widely, and was a diligent scholar. He translated Blaise Pascal's Provincial Letters in 1657, under the title of Les Provinciales, or the Mystery of Jesuitisme, discovered in certain letters written upon occasion of the present differences at Sorbonne between the jansenists and the molinists, London, Royston, 1657)[3].

Footnotes

  1. ^ http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=62856#n31
  2. ^ Dictionary of National Biography, article on Fulman.
  3. ^ See Louis Cognet's introduction (in French) to the Lettres Provinciales, of 1965; re-published in Sellier's edition of Pascal, Les Provinciales, Pensées et Opuscules divers, Classique Garnier 1991-1992 or Librairie Générale Française, Paris, 2004 (Pochotèque, p. 218). Cognet says that Henry Hammond had worked on exemplaries of the original edition, and had the text established by a professional translator, John Davies (Cognet quotes here Paule Jansen, De Blaise Pascal à Henry Hammond: "Les Provinciales" en Angleterre", Paris, 1954). This translation was re-published in 1658 and completed in 1659).

References


 
 

 

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