Solomon L. Hoge
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Solomon Lafayette Hoge | |
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In office April 8, 1869 - March 3, 1871 March 4, 1875 - March 3, 1877 |
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Preceded by | Manuel S. Corley (1st term) Lewis C. Carpenter (2nd term) |
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Succeeded by | Robert B. Elliott (1st term) D. Wyatt Aiken (2nd term) |
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Born | July 11, 1836 Pickrelltown, Ohio |
Died | February 23, 1909 Battle Creek, Michigan |
Political party | Republican |
Solomon Lafayette Hoge (July 11, 1836 – February 23, 1909) was a lawyer, soldier, judge, and politician in Ohio and South Carolina.
Hoge was born in Pickrelltown, Ohio and he received his early childhood education at the public schools in Bellefontaine, Ohio. Afterwards, he received a classical education at Northwood College in Northwood, Ohio and he graduated from Cincinnati Law School in 1859. Hoge was admitted to the bar the same year and commenced the practice of law in Bellefontaine. Upon the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, Hoge enrolled in the Union Army as a First Lieutenant in the Ohio Volunteer Infantry. He was promoted to captain and became the commander of a Federal company of infantry.
After the war, Hoge settled in Columbia, South Carolina and despite possessing little legal experience was elected in 1868 as an associate justice to the South Carolina Supreme Court. While on the bench, Hoge never wrote a single opinion and "I concur" was the extent of his legal analysis. He was aware of his incapacity as a judge and he only served eighteen months on the bench before moving on to the House of Representatives.
Hoge won a seat as a Republican to represent the 3rd congressional district after he successfully challenged the election of Democrat J.P. Reed to the Forty-first Congress. Since the Republicans controlled Congress, the two Democrats elected from South Carolina were unseated and Hoge filled the seat on April 8, 1869 and served the remainder of the term until March 3, 1871. Running on the Republican ticket with Franklin J. Moses, Jr. for governor in 1872, Hoge won the race for comptroller general against the Independent Republican candidate J. Scott Murray of Anderson. In 1874, Hoge waged another run for Congress to represent the 3rd district and he defeated Samuel McGowan, a Conservative Party candidate, to win the seat.
Upon the completion of his term in 1877, South Carolina Republicans were in a state of disarray following Wade Hampton's victory in the 1876 gubernatorial election. Most white carpetbaggers left the state and Hoge was no different. He moved to Kenton, Ohio and practiced law there until 1882 when he became president of the First National Bank of Kenton. Hoge died in Battle Creek, Michigan and was interned at Grove Cemetery in Kenton.
[edit] References
- Congressional biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- Reynolds, John S. (1969). Reconstruction in South Carolina. Negro University Press, pp. 104, 112-113. ISBN 0-8371-1638-4.