Charles Hammarquist
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Charles G. Hammarquist (November 22, 1822 – December 3, 1889) was an American farmer, merchant and postmaster from Busseyville, Wisconsin, who served in the Wisconsin State Assembly.
Background
He was born in Norrköping, Sweden on November 22, 1822, as Karl G. Hammarquist. His father was a wine merchant in Norrköping. Young Karl attended a select school, and received an extensive education before leaving school at age 16 to join his father's business. He stayed in the wine business until his father's death, but in 1840 took up farming near Stockholm.
He came to Wisconsin in August 1843 as part of a larger group of Swedes who stopped briefly in Pine Lake, Wisconsin before moving on to the Lake Koshkonong area to become a pioneer farmer. This group, (which included Thure Kumlien, later to become a notable naturalist) was described by one historian as "not farmers, but highly educated men who learned in time to clear forests and till the soil for homes in this new land."[1] In September 1846 he married Josephina Maximiliana Eugenia Reuterskjold (born January 4, 1830, in Västergötland), another of that group.
Public office
In 1849, he was elected a justice of the peace, a position he would hold until 1865. In 1857, he served one term as a member of the board of supervisors. When the Town of Sumner was organized, he was elected and served two terms as chairman of the city council (equivalent to a mayor), which again made him ex officio a member of the county board.
When elected in 1859 to the Assembly as a Republican from the 2nd Jefferson County district (the Towns of Koshkonong, Oakland, Lake Mills, Aztalan and Jefferson), he was the first immigrant Swede to be elected to the legislature of a Western state.[2] He served on the standing committee on roads, bridges and ferries.[3] He succeeded fellow Republican George C. Smith. He only served a single one-year term and was succeeded by Horace B. Willard, another Republican.[4][5]
In 1865, he was appointed postmaster of Busseyville, and was still holding that office as of 1879.
After the legislature
As of 1879, he owned a general store and was farming 140 acres. He and Josephine had nine children.[6] He died December 3, 1889, and is buried in the Hammarquist family plot in the Busseyville Cemetery.
References
- ^ Maine, Angie Kumlien. "Thure Kumlien, Swedish-American Naturalist. American Swedish Historical Foundation Yearbook 1960 Philadelphia: American Swedish Historical Foundation, 1960; p. 71
- ^ Barton, Albert O. "Carl Gustaf Mellberg, Koshkonong Pioneer" Wisconsin Magazine of History June 1946; pp. 408, 411
- ^ Crane, L. H. D., ed. A manual of customs, precedents, and forms, in use in the Assembly of Wisconsin: together with the rules, the apportionment, and other lists and tables for reference, with indices: Second Annual Edition Madison: James Ross, State Printer, 1860; pp. 9, 14
- ^ Crane, L. H. D., ed. A manual of customs, precedents and forms, in use in the Assembly of Wisconsin; together with the rules, the apportionments, and other lists and tables for reference, with indices: Third Annual Edition Madison: James Ross, State Printer, 1861; p. 16
- ^ "Members of the Wisconsin Legislature 1848–1999 State of Wisconsin Legislative Bureau. Information Bulletin 99-1, September 1999. p. 58
- ^ "C. G. Hammarquist" in, The History of Jefferson County, Wisconsin, Containing A History of Jefferson County, Its Early Settlement, Growth... etc. Chicago: Western Historical Company, 1879; pp. 712-13
- 1822 births
- 1889 deaths
- Republican Party members of the Wisconsin State Assembly
- People from Jefferson County, Wisconsin
- Swedish emigrants to the United States
- Farmers from Wisconsin
- County supervisors in Wisconsin
- People from Norrköping
- Wisconsin postmasters
- 19th-century American merchants
- 19th-century members of the Wisconsin Legislature
- 19th-century mayors of places in Wisconsin
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