Augustus Albert Hardenbergh (May 18, 1830 in New Brunswick, New Jersey – October 5, 1889 in Jersey City, New Jersey ) was an American Democratic Party politician who represented New Jersey 's 7th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives from 1875 to 1879, and again from 1881 to 1883.
31-786: Hardenbergh is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Augustus Albert Hardenbergh , Congressman from New Jersey Cornelius A.J. Hardenbergh , politician from New York Henry Janeway Hardenbergh , American architect Johannes Hardenbergh , High Sheriff Jacob Hardenbergh (1823–1872), New York politician Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh (1736–1790), First President of Rutgers, grandson of Johannes See also [ edit ] Hardenbergh, alternate name for Hardenburg, California Isaac Hardenbergh House (also known as The Hardenbergh Manor ) Hardenberg (surname) Hardenberg (disambiguation) Hardenburg (disambiguation) [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with
62-455: A "Liberty of Conscience" bill allowing priests access to state penal and mental institutions. In 1877, Abbett was elevated to the Senate presidency. He won support from organized labor by sponsoring a statute requiring employers to pay in cash. He drafted an additional statute giving employees of the bankrupt Jersey Central Railroad the right to claim their salaries as a prior lien on the assets of
93-415: A daughters. She died of cancer at forty years old in 1879. Abbett never remarried. Abbett was short and stocky, standing five feet eight inches and weighing about 175 pounds. He had a round face with a high forehead, broad shoulders, brown wavy hair, bright blue eyes, and large bushy eyebrows. He sported a wide mustache and full beard for his entire public career. Abbett received the degree LL.D. from
124-620: A delegate to the 1872 Democratic National Convention . He moved to Jersey City in 1873 and was elected president of the Northern Railroad of New Jersey in 1874. Hardenbergh was elected as a Democrat to the Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth Congresses, serving in office from March 4, 1875 – March 3, 1879, but declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1878. He was elected president of the Hudson County National Bank in 1878. He
155-549: A distinguished patent and admiralty lawyer, until 1866. In 1864, Abbett entered politics by campaigning for General George McClellan 's presidential campaign against Abraham Lincoln . In the same election, Abbett was elected to represent Hoboken in the New Jersey General Assembly . In the Assembly, Abbett was aligned with the party's anti-war Copperhead wing and a staunch advocate of states' rights. Though Abbett
186-536: A law clerk in the office of U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania John W. Ashmead. He was admitted to the bar in 1857, engaging in practice with his instructor. After struggling to attract clients in Philadelphia, Abbett moved to Hoboken, New Jersey in 1859 and became corporation counsel for Jersey City. In April 1861, he moved to New York City and formed a law partnership with William J. Fuller,
217-637: A member of the New York State Assembly from 1885 to 1886. His third cousin, Jacob Hardenbergh , served as a New York State Senator from 1870 to 1872. [REDACTED] This article incorporates public domain material from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Leon Abbett Leon Abbett (October 8, 1836 – December 4, 1894) was an American Democratic Party politician and lawyer who served two nonconsecutive terms as
248-520: A vigorous campaign in favor of railroad taxation. Though he campaigned throughout the state, the race was centered on Jersey City, since the Republican candidate was Jersey City judge Jonathan Dixon , who had drafted the famous state charter of 1871 and had an anti-labor reputation as a jurist. Abbett defeated Dixon by 103,856 votes to 97,047. Abbett made the rail tax issue a major thrust of his inaugural message, setting up his first term for conflict with
279-521: A wide margin of over 14,000 votes, though at least some of his support in Jersey City was fraudulent. On his return to office, Abbett seized on outrage over the fraud in the 1889 election by proposing a ballot reform law. Working with a friendly Democratic legislature, he also oversaw passage of a package of labor laws, free public libraries, scholarships for the agricultural college at Rutgers, highway improvements, increased funding for public schools, and
310-568: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Augustus Albert Hardenbergh Hardenbergh was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey on May 18, 1830. He attended Rutgers College in 1844 and took up residence in Jersey City, New Jersey in 1846 and was employed in a banking house in New York City. He was a clerk in the Hudson County National Bank in 1852. He served as a member of
341-401: The New Jersey General Assembly in 1853 and 1854. He was a member of the board of education in 1855 and 1856, and a member of the common council of Jersey City 1857-1863, serving as president in 1860. He moved to Bergen, New Jersey in 1863 and was a member of the city council of Bergen. He was elected State director of railroads in 1868, and moved to Demarest, New Jersey , that same year. He was
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#1732851061299372-450: The surname Hardenbergh . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hardenbergh&oldid=1001272514 " Categories : Surnames Dutch-language surnames Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description
403-453: The 26th Governor of New Jersey from 1884 to 1887 and 1890 to 1893. His official state biography refers to Abbett as "undoubtedly the most powerful person in New Jersey in the late nineteenth century" and "the first urban-oriented governor" of New Jersey. He was popularly known as the "Great Commoner" for his advocacy on behalf of ordinary citizens. He failed in two attempts to win election to
434-556: The Senate in 1893 but was again defeated. In 1893, he was appointed a judge on the state supreme court , at that time an intermediate appellate court. Abbett died in 1894 in his Jersey City home after an attack of diabetes . He was buried in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn , New York. Abbett married Mary Briggs of Philadelphia on October 8, 1862. Mary was the daughter of Philadelphia judge Amos Briggs. They had two sons and
465-633: The United States Senate. Abbett was born in Philadelphia on October 8, 1836 to Ezekiel and Sarah M. Abbett (née Howell). His father was a journeyman hatter. His mother was born to a prominent but not wealthy family in Mauricetown, New Jersey and operated a millinery shop. He graduated from Central High School in 1853. His classmates included Henry George and Ignatius Donnelly . After graduating high school, Abbett read law and served as
496-467: The abolition of convict labor for private profit, tighter regulations on working conditions for women and children, and refinancing provisions for the bankrupt cities of Elizabeth and Rahway . Abbett maintained his practice of appointment by spoils , displeasing civil service reformers. In retaliation, the Republican legislature stripped him of control of many appointments. As governor, Abbett dramatically reversed his earlier positions on race, urging
527-616: The company. Abbett first sought the governorship in 1877, but was blocked by the State House Ring in favor of George B. McClellan. Abbett showed party loyalty by campaigning for McClellan through the fall. Abbett left office at the end of his term but remained a major player in Hudson County and state politics as corporation counsel for Jersey City. After the death of his wife in 1879, he briefly left politics entirely. He returned in 1880 upon learning that his rival, Orestes Cleveland ,
558-424: The dominant "State House Ring," led by former Governor and Hudson County Senator Theodore Fitz Randolph , by supporting Robert Gilchrist against Randolph. This effort failed, but Abbett successfully backed McPherson for the state's other Senate seat in 1877. Abbett kept his campaign pledge by obtaining passage of a reform municipal charter restoring home rule and gained further support from Catholics by passage of
589-467: The election of Rufus Blodgett instead. Abbett took the defeat hard and became legal counsel for the state liquor dealers' association, an important source of campaign funds. Abbett remained popular in his time out of office and was recruited to run for a second non-consecutive term in 1889. After securing a twofold pay raise for the office, Abbett agreed to run. He faced Republican iron magnate and Civil War hero Edward Burd Grubb Jr. and defeated him by
620-515: The establishment of the state department of banking and insurance. His appointments were a mix of competent men and corrupt Hudson County machine workers. In 1890, Abbett defused a labor strike at the Clark Thread Mills in Kearney , where management had hired Pinkerton detectives as strikebreakers, by deputizing the Jersey City police to restore order. He then called for the establishment of
651-718: The first state police force . In 1891, Abbett again intervened in a labor dispute at the Oxford Iron and Nail Company in Warren County, where workers were starved by a winter lockout. Following this incident, he called for new laws regulating mine safety. In his second term, Abbett also vetoed bills legalizing gambling at horse-racing tracks and incorporating the Reading Railroad Coal Combine. He successfully appealed for public support to sustain both vetoes. With his term expiring, Abbett once again sought election to
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#1732851061299682-503: The institution's first President from 1786 to 1790. His 3rd great-grandfather was Johannes Hardenbergh , and the town of Hardenburgh, New York is named after him. Hardenbergh is also a descendant of New Paltz Patentee (founder) and Huguenot Louis DuBois , and the Hasbrouck family of Ulster County, New York. His second cousin, Cornelius A.J. Hardenbergh , was Town Supervisor of Shawangunk, New York from 1861 to 1867 and 1876 to 1882, and
713-508: The passage of a bill to allow former slaves burial at an all-white cemetery and serving as the godfather of a black child in Newark baptized as Leon Abbett DeKalb in days when interracial baptism was rare. Prohibited from seeking a second consecutive term in 1886, Abbett instead sought election to the U.S. Senate in early 1887. However, conservative pro-rail Democrats identified with the State House Ring withheld their support from Abbett, leading to
744-409: The railroads. Through skillful publicity and threatening to withhold appropriations until the tax was passed, Abbett won the legislative struggle. The railroads then sought court relief, challenging the tax as unconstitutional. The opposition also failed to impeach Patrick Laverty, the state prison warden, during this time. Several other bills were enacted to cope with urban industrialism, including
775-455: The state revision of the Jersey City charter, which removed many Irish officeholders in the name of anti-corruption and replaced them with appointed commissioners. In 1874, Abbett was elected to the State Senate from Hudson County by promising to restore home rule. With John R. McPherson , Abbett worked to temper remaining nativism within the state Democratic Party. Abbett broke sharply with
806-508: Was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress, serving in office from March 4, 1881 – March 3, 1883, but was not a candidate for renomination in 1882. Hardenbergh was one of the rare Democrats willing to buck his party's overwhelming support for the exclusion of Chinese laborers in 1882. He condemned the prejudice which was a key force in the push for Chinese exclusion, asking "Is freedom incompatible with any race . . . ?" Hardenbergh
837-631: Was interred in Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Newark, New Jersey . Hardenbergh was the son of Cornelius Low Hardenbergh (1790-1851), a mayor of New Brunswick, New Jersey from 1829 to 1838, and his wife, Mary (née Warren) Hardenbergh (1802-1851). His grandfather, Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh Jr. (1768-1844) was a Trustee of Rutgers University from 1792 to 1841, and was a graduate of that institution. His great-grandfather, Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh , helped found Rutgers in 1766 as Queen's College, and served as
868-754: Was philosophically opposed to slavery, he opposed the Emancipation Proclamation and both the Thirteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. He opposed the expansion of federal power during the Reconstruction era . He gained statewide recognition by defending Democratic U.S. Senator John P. Stockton after his expulsion by the Republican Senate. In 1867, Abbett moved to Jersey City to broaden his political base. He
899-610: Was re-elected to the General Assembly for the next two years and elevated to Speaker of the Assembly. During the 1870s, Abbett allied himself with the powerful Camden and Amboy Railroad monopoly. As a Protestant in a county with a growing Irish constituency, Abbett courted the Irish vote by working to soften the Protestant tone of school prayer requirements and distributing patronage jobs to Irish residents. In 1871, Abbett spoke out against
930-474: Was seeking the governor's office. As chairman of the state convention, Abbett steered the nomination to George C. Ludlow , who won the general election. During the Ludlow administration, Abbett was active in efforts to tax the state's railroad monopoly, bringing him into direct conflict with the established order of business and politics. In 1883, Abbett was nominated for Governor for the first time. He conducted
961-509: Was well aware of the stifling party pressure to support exclusion, but responded that "In the vindication of human rights I will know no party. After leaving Congress, he was appointed a member of the Jersey City Board of Finance and Taxation in 1883-1889, and was appointed by Governor Leon Abbett as a trustee of the State reform school in 1884. He died in Jersey City on October 5, 1889. He