Peter Hitchcock

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Peter Marshall Hitchcock
Justice Peter Hitchcock (OH).png
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Ohio's 6th district
In office
March 4, 1817 – March 3, 1819
Preceded by David Clendenin
Succeeded by John Sloane
Member of the Ohio Senate
In office
1812-1815
Member of the Ohio House of Representatives
In office
1810
Personal details
Born (1781-10-19)October 19, 1781
Cheshire, Connecticut
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Painesville, Ohio
Resting place Welton Cemetery, Burton, Ohio
Political party <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Spouse(s) Nabbe Cook
Children ten
Alma mater Yale University

Peter Marshall Hitchcock[1] (19 October 1781 – 4 March 1853[2]) was an attorney, teacher, farmer, soldier, legislator, and jurist. His judicial career included 28 years service on the Ohio Supreme Court, 21 years of them as Chief Justice. (Some sources erroneously give his date of death as March 4, 1854.)

Early life, education and family

Peter Hitchcock was born in Cheshire, Connecticut, the youngest son of Valentine Hitchcock (1741–1809) and Sarah Hotchkiss (1743–1802). His father was a tailor and landowner. Peter taught in a district school during the winter and worked on a farm in the summer to earn the money for his education. He entered college in the sophomore year, pursuing classical studies and was graduated from Yale College in 1801. He studied law with Barzillai Slosson (Yale 1791), of Kent, Connecticut, and was admitted to the bar in 1804 and commenced practice in Cheshire. On December 12, 1805 in Cheshire, he married Nabbe Cook (1784–1867) (sometimes written Nabby Cook).

In 1806, they moved to Burton, Ohio, becoming one of the first families to settle in that township of Geauga County, Ohio in the Western Reserve. They had ten children, five sons and five daughters, all born in Ohio. One son and one daughter died in infancy. Two of the sons also were graduated from Yale. Hitchcock spent the early years improving his farm, establishing his law practice and teaching. Peter Hitchcock was the first teacher at Burton Academy, which eventually became a part of Case Western Reserve University.

Practice of law and early public career

After a few years, the population of the county increased sufficiently to provide him an extensive practice. As an advocate, his style of speech was described as colloquial and logical rather than rhetorical, the more common style of the day. He was always accorded the most profound attention when arguing a case, whether to a jury, a Justice of the Peace or before the judges of the highest courts.

Peter Hitchcock was elected a member of the Ohio House of Representatives in 1810 and elected a member of the Ohio Senate in 1812 serving until 1815. He served as speaker (President) of the Senate in 1815. Hitchcock was nominated for United States Senator in the legislative balloting to replace Thomas Worthington in 1814 and then the full term to replace Joseph Kerr in 1815, failing both times to attract sufficient votes.

Peter Hitchcock was commissioned lieutenant colonel of the Fourth Regiment, Ohio State Militia, in 1814 and then commissioned major general, Fourth Division, Ohio State Militia, in 1816.

Peter Hitchcock was elected as a Democratic-Republican from Ohio's 6th congressional district to the Fifteenth United States Congress. He was not a candidate for renomination in 1818.

Judicial service

The legislature appointed Peter Hitchcock a judge of the Supreme Court of Ohio in 1819 for a seven-year term, and reappointed him to a second term in 1826. Prior to 1831, panels of the Supreme Court traveled over the State in circuit, panels simultaneously holding sessions in different counties of the state. After 1831, it became the practice for the Supreme Court of Ohio to sit en banc at the capital. Judge Peter Hitchcock generally traveled the circuit on horseback or his own Yankee wagon. He would reach a county seat by noon or later, and immediately went to the Clerk's office. All the chancery cases and demurrers, or other papers for the Court, would be in his room and usually settled by the time Court opened the next morning.

His method of preparing to hear a case was to determine the primary question in the case, review the law books, but develop his own line of reasoning. In court, he did not refuse to hear argument, but unless it was quite an important case, or he indicated a desire to hear argument, the members of the Bar were apt to submit directly to his examinations. It was rare that the court's business was not completed in a day.

Partisan maneuvering kept Judge Hitchcock off the court in 1833. Instead he ran and was elected to another term in the Ohio Senate, again serving as speaker. Hitchcock was reappointed to another seven-year term on the court in 1835. In 1842, partisanship again took him off the court until 1845 when he was appointed to another seven-year term. He voluntarily retired in 1852 at the end of his fourth term. Of the twenty-eight years he served on the Supreme Court of Ohio, the last twenty-one of them were as chief justice.

Hitchcock was a Presidential elector in 1844 for Clay/Frelinghuysen.[3]

The honorary degree of Doctor of Laws was conferred on him by Marietta College in 1845 and by Western Reserve College in 1849.

Constitutional convention of 1850

He was elected as a Whig delegate to the Ohio constitutional convention in 1850 called to revise the 1802 constitution. In this capacity he contributed to reorganization of the judicial tribunals of the state, and still continued to discharge his duties on the bench. He was called the "Father of the constitution of 1851."

One of the debates was over granting the power of the veto to the governor. As a good Whig, Judge Peter Hitchcock opposed it:

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It seems to me that the idea of giving to the governor a veto is inconsistent with our professions. It looks as though we distrusted the capabilities of the people for self-government. In fact, it is based upon the assumption that the people are incapable of self government. It implies also another fact, that we distrust our own qualifications to elect such men to do the business of the state as are worthy of being trusted. We are afraid to trust the legislative department of the government and therefore we put it under the care of the governor. ... They say the governor is the representative of the whole people, because the whole people have voted for him. He is the representative of the masses, and therefore he may with propriety interfere with the proceedings of the Legislature. But why not carry the reasoning out? If the governor be the representative of the whole people, and he alone knows the sentiments and wants of the people and can best provide for them, why not dispense with the Legislature and give the governor the power to make the laws?

The convention did not give the governor the veto in the new constitution.

Retired from public life

Peter Hitchcock was the uncle of Seabury Ford, the first Ohio governor from the Western Reserve. Peter Hitchcock died in Painesville, Ohio, while stopped at the home of his eldest son on his way home from Columbus, Ohio to Burton. He was interred in Welton Cemetery, Burton, Ohio.

Notes

  1. The Supreme Court of Ohio and The Ohio Judicial System - Peter Marshall Hitchcock
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  3. Taylor 1899 : 255

References

  • Peter Hitchcock at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
  • Transactions at the annual meeting of the Maumee Valley Pioneer and Historical Association: held at Toledo, February 22d, 1877. Toledo, Ohio: Blade Printing and Paper Co., 1877, 75 pgs.
  • Rice, Harvey, Sketches of western life. Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1887, 255 pgs.
  • Hitchcock, Mary L. The Hitchcock Family. Massachusetts: Privately Published, 1894.
  • Munson, Myron A. The Munson record: a genealogical and biographical account of Captain Thomas Munson and his descendants. New Haven, Conn.: Printed for the Munson Association, 1895, 1341 pgs.
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  • Dexter, Franklin Bowditch. Biographical sketches of the graduates of Yale. New York: Henry Holt and Co. from 1885 to 1912, 4752 pgs.
  • Beach, Joseph Perkins. History of Cheshire, Connecticut from 1694 to 1840. Cheshire, Conn.: Lady Fenwick Chapter, D.A.R., 1912, 574 pgs.
  • Youngstown. Chicago: American Historical Society, 1920, 322 pgs.
  • Galbreath, C. B. History of Ohio. Chicago: American Historical Society, 1925, 3562 pgs.
  • Roseboom, Eugene Holloway. The Civil War era from 1850 to 1873. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, 1944, 576 pgs.
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External links

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Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the Ohio Senate
1815-12-04 – 1816-12-01
Succeeded by
Abraham Shepherd
Preceded by Speaker of the Ohio Senate
December 1, 1834 - March 6, 1835
Succeeded by
Charles Anthony
Ohio House of Representatives
Preceded by
Amos Spofford
as Representative from Geauga County
Representative from Geauga and Cuyahoga Counties
1810–1811
Succeeded by
Samuel Huntington
as Representative from Geauga, Ashtabula, and Cuyahoga Counties
Ohio Senate
Preceded by Senator from Geauga, Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, and Portage Counties
1812–1815
Succeeded by
Himself
as Senator from Geauga, Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Huron, and Portage Counties
Preceded by
Himself
as Senator from Geauga, Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, and Portage Counties
Senator from Geauga, Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Huron, and Portage Counties
1815–1816
Succeeded by
Almon Ruggles
Aaron Wheeler
United States House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Ohio's 6th congressional district

1817–1819
Succeeded by
John Sloane
Legal offices
Preceded by Ohio Supreme Court Judges
1819-1833
Succeeded by
Reuben Wood
Preceded by Ohio Supreme Court Judges
1835-1842
Succeeded by
Matthew Birchard
Preceded by Ohio Supreme Court Judges
1845-1852
Succeeded by
Allen G. Thurman

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