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Horace Henry Baxter

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H. Henry Baxter

Horace Henry Baxter (January 8, 1818 – February 17, 1884) was a Vermont businessman who served as Adjutant General of Vermont at the start of the American Civil War and President of the New York Central Railroad.

Early life

H. Henry Baxter, the son of Judge Henry Baxter, was born in Saxtons River, Vermont on January 8, 1818. He attended schools in Windham and Windsor Counties and at age 15 he became a clerk in a Boston dry goods commission warehouse. He worked in Boston for two years and became a supervisor of employees as the warehouse's head bookkeeper.[1]

In the mid-1830s Baxter returned to Vermont, after securing the financing to open his own dry goods store in Bellows Falls. Having extended credit to his customers during the Panic of 1837, Baxter did not receive timely repayment. He closed the store when he was unable to run it profitably.[2]

Business career

Despite bouts of ill health usually caused by overwork, Baxter was a large man with commanding presence. Drawing on these traits and his experience managing employees in Boston, in the early 1840s Baxter bid successfully for the contract to grade rail bed and lay track for the Rutland and Burlington Railroad. Baxter personally supervised his workers, and completed the Rutland and Burlington contract successfully. His success led to construction work for other railroads, including the Western Vermont and Cleveland and Toledo. Baxter then settled in Rutland and purchased the Rutland Marble Company.[3][4] Baxter operated Rutland Marble in partnership with his brother John N. Baxter and Charles Clement and Sons, which included Percival W. Clement. Rutland Marble employed Redfield Proctor as Manager.[5]

Baxter operated a farm on Creek Road. Baxter called his farm Maple Grove, and raised cattle, sheep and thoroughbred horses. Baxter also constructed a mansion at Maple Grove, which he called Grove Hall. After his death his home was operated as the Crestwood Hotel until it was demolished in 1945.[6]

Military career

Having served as a Captain in a militia unit called the Rutland Light Guards, in 1859 Baxter was appointed Adjutant General of the Vermont Militia, and was succeeded as company commander by William Y. W. Ripley.[7] He took steps to prepare the militia in anticipation of the Civil War, and also served as a Delegate to the Peace Conference that attempted to prevent the conflict.[8][9][10]

After the war started Baxter was responsible for recruiting the 1st Vermont Infantry, a regiment enlisted for three months' service. Baxter used his own funds to ensure that 1st Vermont soldiers were equipped and paid prior to departing for service in the Washington, D.C. area, and rode at the head of the regiment as it departed Vermont.[11][12]

In 1861 he relinquished the Adjutant General's position in favor of someone with combat experience, and was succeeded by Peter T. Washburn, who had been the Lieutenant Colonel of the 1st Vermont and its de facto commander.[13]

Later career

After leaving the Adjutant General's post Baxter returned to his business interests. He sold the Rutland Marble Company to Proctor, and pursued several other opportunities, including founding the Rutland County Bank.[14]

After selling Rutland Marble Baxter resided in New York City and Rutland. An associate of Cornelius Vanderbilt, he was a major investor in the New York Central Railroad, serving as President from 1867 to 1869, and a member of the board of directors from 1869 until his death.[15][16] In 1870 he incorporated Rutland's Baxter National Bank, of which he was President until his death.[17]

In addition to his business association with Cornelius Vanderbilt, Baxter sometimes partnered with Trenor W. Park. Baxter's other holdings included large ownership stakes in and/or board of directors memberships with: the Chicago & North Western Railroad; Emma Silver Mine; Pacific Mail Steamship Company; Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad; Panama Canal Railway; Continental Bank of New York City; and the Pullman Palace Car Company. He also owned a construction company which built most of New York City's elevated railway, and was the primary investor in Rutland's gas lighting company.[18]

Death and burial

Baxter was in increasingly poor health in his later years, especially after an 1877 fall left him with a debilitating back injury. He was often bedridden, but continued to actively manage his investments until his death in New York City on February 17, 1884.[19] He was buried in Rutland's Evergreen Cemetery.[20][21]

Family

H. H. Baxter Memorial Library, Rutland, Vermont. Now the Rutland Jewish Center.

In 1841 Baxter married Eliza Wales of Bellows Falls. They had no children, and Eliza died in 1849.[22] In 1851 Baxter married Mary Roberts of Manchester, Vermont.[23] They had two sons, Henry (1856-1860) and Hugh (1862-1945).[24] Hugh Baxter was one of America's first well-known pole vaulters. He held the national title from 1883 to 1886, and set a world record of 11' 1/2" in 1883. He was beaten only once during his pole vaulting career, which continued until 1895.[25]

H. Henry Baxter's brother Algernon Sidney Baxter (1819-1897) was a successful businessman in St. Louis, Missouri and New York City. An acquaintance of Ulysses S. Grant from Grant's time as a resident of St. Louis, A. Sidney Baxter served on Grant's staff as a Captain of Quartermasters from 1861 to 1862, resigning because of illness shortly after the Battle of Shiloh.[26][27]

Legacy

The Gaysvile, Vermont Grand Army of the Republic post was named for him.[28]

Baxter's family contributed to construction of the H. H. Baxter Memorial Library, a landmark which now serves as Rutland's Jewish Center. The Baxter Library was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.[29][30]

References

  1. ^ Henry Hall, editor, America's Successful Men of Affairs, 1895, page 65-66
  2. ^ Atlantic Publishing and Engraving, Memorial: H. Henry Baxter; Born January 18th, 1818, Died February 17, 1884, 1884, page 7
  3. ^ Henry Perry Smith, William S. Rann, editors, History of Rutland County, Vermont, Volume 2, 1886, pages 870-871
  4. ^ Marcus Davis Gilman, editor, The Bibliography of Vermont, page 27
  5. ^ Vermont Historical Society, The Vermont Marble Company Treasurer’s Records, 2007, page 1
  6. ^ Louise McCoy, Rutland Historical Society Quarterly, Horace Henry Baxter 1818-1884, 1993, pages 37 to 59
  7. ^ Lyman Williams Reddington, Centennial Celebration of the Organization of Rutland County, Vt., 1882, pages 26-27
  8. ^ Lucius E. Chittenden, A Report of the Debates and Proceedings of the Conference Convention, 1864, page 465
  9. ^ Vermont Adjutant General, Annual Report, 1957, page 2
  10. ^ Vermont Historical Society, Vermont History, 1970, page 245
  11. ^ Memorial: H. Henry Baxter, page 51
  12. ^ Leon Fink, Workingmen's Democracy: The Knights of Labor and American Politics, 1983, page 70
  13. ^ Thomas D. Seymour Bassett, The Growing Edge: Vermont Villages, 1840-1880, 1992, page 137
  14. ^ Vermont General Assembly, Acts of the Vermont General Assembly, 1861, page 94
  15. ^ New York State Engineer and Surveyor, State of New York Annual Report of the State Engineer and Surveyor, 1868, page 338
  16. ^ Edward J. Renehan, Jr., Commodore: The Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt, 2009, page 260
  17. ^ United States Congress, House Documents, 1872, page 46
  18. ^ America's Successful Men of Affairs, page 65-66
  19. ^ Thomas William Herringshaw, Herringshaw's Encyclopedia of American Biography, 1901, page 91
  20. ^ Horace Henry Baxter 1818-1884, pages 15
  21. ^ Baxter Memorial Library, A Catalogue of the Books in the H. H. Baxter Memorial Library, 1892, page v
  22. ^ Lyman Simpson Hayes, History of the Town of Rockingham, Vermont, 1907, page 771
  23. ^ Joseph Nickerson Baxter, Memorial of the Baxter Family, 1879, page 30
  24. ^ Memorial: H. Henry Baxter; Born January 18th, 1818, Died February 17, 1884. page 46
  25. ^ New York Athletic Club, The Winged Foot, Volume 62, 1951, page 105
  26. ^ Kevin Getchell, Scapegoat of Shiloh, 2013, page 13
  27. ^ Memorial of the Baxter Family, page 30
  28. ^ Erik S. Hinckley, Tom Ledoux, They Went to War: A Biographical Register of the Green Mountain State in the Civil War, 2010, pages 42-43
  29. ^ H. H. Baxter Memorial Library at Go Historic.Com
  30. ^ Rutland Jewish Center, History of the RJC, retrieved November 12, 2013

External resources

Military offices
Preceded by Vermont Adjutant General
1859–1861
Succeeded by