Charles Hawley

{{Short description|American politician}}

{{for|the American orthodontist|Charles A. Hawley}}

{{No footnotes|date=May 2025}}

{{Infobox politician

|name=Charles Hawley

|image=Charles Hawley (1792 - 1866).jpg

|caption=portrait by his daughter, Elizabeth King Hawley

|office= 36th Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut

|term_start=May 2, 1838

|term_end=May 4, 1842

|governor=William W. Ellsworth

|predecessor=Ebenezer Stoddard

|successor=William S. Holabird

|office2=Member of the
Connecticut Senate
from the 12th District

|term_start2=1830

|term_end2=1831

|predecessor2=At large elections

|successor2=Thaddeus Betts

|term_start3=1832

|term_end3=1836

|predecessor3=Thaddeus Betts

|successor3=Benjamin Isaacs

|term_start4=1837

|term_end4=1838

|predecessor4=Benjamin Isaacs

|successor4=Thomas B. Butler

|office5=Member of the
Connecticut House of Representatives
from Stamford

|term_start5=1821

|term_end5=1822

|predecessor5=Thaddeus Bell,
John Augur

|successor5=Daniel Lockwood,
Joseph Wood

|alongside5=Joseph Wood

|term_start6=1823

|term_end6=1824

|predecessor6=Daniel Lockwood,
Joseph Wood

|successor6=Isaac Lockwood,
Theodore Davenport

|alongside6=Daniel Lockwood

|term_start7=1826

|term_end7=1829

|predecessor7=Isaac Lockwood,
Theodore Davenport

|successor7=Simeon H. Minor,
William Waterbury, Jr.

|birth_date={{birth date|1792|06|15}}

|birth_place=Huntington, Connecticut

|death_date={{death date and age|1866|02|27|1792|06|15}}

|death_place=Stamford, Connecticut

|residence=Stamford

|alma_mater=Yale College (1813)

|spouse=Mary S. Holly (m. 1821)

|party=Whig

}}

Charles Hawley (June 15, 1792 – February 27, 1866) was an American politician, judge, and the 36th Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut from 1838 to 1842.

Early life

Hawley was born in that part of Huntington, Connecticut, which now constitutes the town of Monroe. He graduated with honor at Yale College in 1813. He studied law, partly at Newtown with Hon. Asa Chapman, soon after a judge at the Supreme Court, and partly at Litchfield with Judge Gould. He was admitted to the bar in Fairfield County, Connecticut, in 1815 or early 1816, and opened an office in Stamford. After a brief time in East Haddam, he returned to Stamford and remained there for the rest of his life. In 1824, he was appointed Judge of Probate for the district of Stamford, a district which then embraced many towns, an office which he held until 1838.

In 1821, he married Mary Stiles Holly, with whom he had children, most of whom survived him. He was a firm believer in the Christian religion and a member of the Congregational Church in Stamford.

Political career

Hawley repeatedly represented the town of Stamford in the Connecticut House of Representatives and was also a member of the Connecticut Senate representing the 12th District. As a Whig, he held the office of Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut for four periods, from May 2, 1838 until May 4, 1842, while William W. Ellsworth was Governor of the state.

He died in Stamford on February 27, 1866, aged 74.

References

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20110616023952/http://www.cslib.org/memorials/hawleyc.htm Memorials of Connecticut Judges and Attorneys, Charles Hawley] as printed in the Connecticut Reports, volume 32, pages 598–600
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20071026194408/http://www.cslib.org/agencies/lieutenantgovernor.htm Brief Descriptions of Connecticut State Agencies: Lieutenant Governor]