Clement Warner
Colonel Clement Edson Warner (February 23, 1836–1916) was a Wisconsin farmer and officer in the American Civil War who served two years (1867–68) as a Unionist member of the Wisconsin State Senate and one (1883) as a Republican member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from Dane County.
Background and war experience
Warner was born in Batavia, New York on February 23, 1836; received a public school education; and became a farmer. He came to Wisconsin in 1852 and settled at Windsor, Wisconsin. In 1857 he was enrolled in classes at the University of Wisconsin.[1] During the American Civil War he assisted in raising a company for the 36th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment, and was mustered in as captain in March, 1864, joining the Army of the Potomac in May; within one hundred days the regiment was nearly annihilated in battles around Richmond and Petersburg, during which time he received commissions as major, lieutenant-colonel and colonel. He lost an arm August 14, 1864, while in command of the regiment at the Second Battle of Deep Bottom; he returned to his regiment in November and commanded it until the close of the war; his regiment participated in the Richmond-Petersburg Campaign in 1864 and 1865; was in the final charge April 2 at Petersburg, and present at the surrender of Robert E. Lee at Appomattox Court House April 9, 1865; and mustered out July 12, 1865.
Public office
Warner was elected to the Senate as a Unionist in 1867 (succeeding fellow Unionist Willard Chandler) and as a Republican in 1868. He was succeeded by Republican Nelson Williams.
In 1877 he became Superintendent of the Poor for Dane County. In 1883 he was elected to the second Dane County Assembly district (Bristol, Burke, Cottage Grove, Deerfield, Medina, Sun Prairie, Vienna, Windsor and York) to succeed fellow Republican Elisha Keyes for 1883, receiving 980 votes against 945 for Democrat A. L. Durfey and 1 for Prohibitionist J. F. Taylor.[2] He was not a candidate for re-election in 1884, and was succeeded by Republican Charles Buell.
Heritage
He married Eliza Noble; their son Ernest Noble Warner would represent Madison in the Wisconsin State Assembly; his grandson Fred Risser in the State Senate; and his great-grandson Fred A. Risser would represent Madison both in the Assembly and the State Senate.
Further reading
- Warner, Clement Edson; Elizabeth Marshall Warner, Judith Mayer Risser, eds. "The letters of Colonel Clement Edson Warner, while serving in the Thirty-Sixth Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War, 1864-1865: with quotations from the military history of Wisconsin, by E.B. Quiner, 1866: family history, other letters, and memorabilia relating to colonel Warner and family Milwaukee, 2004.