Garret A. Hobart

Miscellaneous

Popular As Garret Augustus Hobart

Birthday June 3, 1844

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Long Branch, New Jersey, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1899-11-21, Paterson, New Jersey, U.S. (55 years old)

Nationality United States

#31037 Most Popular

1841

When Addison and Sophia Hobart married in 1841, they moved to Long Branch, where Addison founded an elementary school.

The couple had three children who survived infancy; Garret was the second of three boys.

Hobart initially attended his father's school in Long Branch.

1844

Garret Augustus Hobart (June 3, 1844 – November 21, 1899) was the 24th vice president of the United States, serving from 1897 until his death in 1899, under President William McKinley.

A member of the Republican Party, Hobart was an influential New Jersey businessman, politician, and political operative prior to his vice presidency.

Hobart was born in Long Branch, New Jersey, on the Jersey Shore, and grew up in nearby Marlboro.

He attended Rutgers College in New Brunswick, and read law under Paterson-based attorney Socrates Tuttle.

He both studied with Tuttle and married his daughter, Jennie.

Although he rarely set foot in a courtroom, Hobart became wealthy as a corporate lawyer.

Garret Augustus Hobart was born on June 3, 1844, in Long Branch, New Jersey, to Addison Willard Hobart and the former Sophia Vanderveer.

Addison Hobart descended from the early colonial-era settlers of New England; many Hobarts served as pastors.

Addison Hobart came to New Jersey, where he taught school in Bradevelt, a small hamlet in Marlboro Township, New Jersey.

1850

The family moved to Marlboro in the early 1850s, where he attended the village school.

Childhood tales of the future vice president describe him as an excellent student in both day and Sunday School, and a leader in boyhood sports.

Recognizing his abilities, his father sent him to a well-regarded school in Freehold.

After a disagreement with the teacher, however, he refused to return.

He then attended Middletown Point Academy, later known as the Glenwood Institute, a boarding school in Matawan, New Jersey.

Hobart graduated at age 15.

His parents felt he was too young to attend college, so he remained at home for a year, where he studied and worked part-time at the Bradevelt School, the same institution that employed his father.

1860

In 1860, Hobart enrolled at Rutgers College.

1863

In 1863, he graduated third in his class.

Throughout his adult life, Hobart was a generous donor to Rutgers, and was awarded an honorary degree after becoming vice president, and was elected a Rutgers trustee shortly before his death.

After graduating from Rutgers, Hobart worked briefly as a teacher to repay loans.

Although Hobart was young and in good health, he did not serve in the Union Army.

Addison Hobart's childhood friend, lawyer Socrates Tuttle, offered to take Hobart into his office to study law.

Tuttle was a prominent Passaic County lawyer who had served in the New Jersey state legislature.

Hobart supported himself by working as a bank clerk in Paterson; he later became director of the same bank.

1866

Hobart was admitted to the bar in 1866; he became a counsellor-at-law in 1871 and a master in chancery in 1872.

In addition to learning law from Tuttle, Hobart fell in love with his daughter, Jennie Tuttle Hobart, who later recalled, "When this attractive young law student appeared in our home I, then a young girl in my teens, unexpectedly played a rôle of importance by losing my heart to him".

1874

Hobart served in local governmental positions, and then successfully ran for office as a Republican, serving in both the New Jersey General Assembly, where he was elected Speaker in 1874, and the New Jersey Senate, where he became its president in 1881.

1896

He was a longtime party official; during the 1896 Republican National Convention, New Jersey delegates to the convention were determined to nominate him for vice president.

Hobart's political views were similar to those of William McKinley, the presumptive Republican presidential candidate.

With New Jersey a key state in the upcoming election, McKinley and his close adviser, future U.S. Senator Mark Hanna, decided to have the convention select Hobart.

The vice presidential candidate emulated his running mate with a front porch campaign, and also spent considerable time at the campaign's New York City headquarters.

On November 3, 1896, McKinley and Hobart were elected.

As vice president, Hobart proved a popular figure in Washington and was a close adviser to McKinley.

1899

Hobart's tact and good humor were valuable to the President, as in mid-1899 when Secretary of War Russell Alger failed to understand that McKinley wanted him to leave office.

Hobart invited Alger to his New Jersey summer home and broke the news to the secretary, who submitted his resignation to McKinley on his return to Washington.

Hobart died on November 21, 1899, of heart disease at age 55; his place on the Republican ticket in 1900 was taken by Theodore Roosevelt.

2017

His mother was descended from 17th-century Dutch settlers of New Amsterdam in present-day New York City, who later moved to Long Island and then ultimately to New Jersey.