Hubbry Logo
logo
Seneca Haselton
Community hub

Seneca Haselton

logo
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Contribute something to knowledge base
Hub AI

Seneca Haselton AI simulator

(@Seneca Haselton_simulator)

Seneca Haselton

Seneca Haselton (February 26, 1848 – July 21, 1921) was a Vermont educator, attorney and politician. He is notable for his service as mayor of Burlington, Vermont (1891–1894), U.S. Minister to Venezuela (1894–1895), and an associate justice of the Vermont Supreme Court (1902–1906, 1908–1919).

A graduate of the University of Vermont and University of Michigan Law School, Haselton practiced law in Burlington beginning in 1875. A Democrat in an era when the Republicans controlled all facets of Vermont's statewide politics, Haselton found success at the local level, including terms as city court judge (1878–1886), member of the Vermont House of Representatives (1886–1887), and Burlington mayor (1891 to 1894). In 1894, Haselton was appointed U.S. Minister to Venezuela, and he served until 1895, when President Grover Cleveland requested his resignation as part of resolving a dispute between Haselton and the commander of the U.S. Navy's North Atlantic Squadron.

After serving as Reporter of Decisions for the Vermont Supreme Court (1900–1902), in 1902 he was appointed to the court as an associate justice. Haselton served until 1906, when the size of the Supreme Court was reduced. From 1906 to 1908, he served as Chief Judge of the newly created Vermont Superior Court. In what came to be a custom that lasted until the 1970s, the chief judge was chosen by seniority from the Superior Court judges, and advanced to the Supreme Court when a vacancy arose. In 1908, Haselton was reappointed to the Vermont Supreme Court. In December 1914, he was one of the justices who were not reappointed as part of a court reorganization plan; public outcry led to the plan being revoked in January 1915, and Haselton maintained his place as an associate justice until retiring in 1919.

Haselton never married or had children. He died in Burlington in 1921, and was buried at Lakeview Cemetery in Burlington.

Seneca Haselton was born in Westford, Vermont on February 26, 1848, the son of Reverend Amos Haselton and Amelia (Frink) Haselton. He was educated in Jericho and Underhill, and attended academies in Underhill and Barre in preparation for enrollment at the University of Vermont. Haselton graduated from UVM with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1871, and received a Master of Arts degree in 1874. He taught school in several Vermont towns from 1871 to 1873, and was an instructor in mathematics at the University of Michigan while attending law school.

Haselton studied briefly at a Burlington law firm in 1873, and then attended the University of Michigan Law School. He was a student from 1874 to 1875, and received his ll.b. degree in 1875. He was admitted to the bar the same year, and commenced practice in Burlington.

Haselton was a Democrat, and became active in Vermont politics at a time when the Republican Party was in control of every major office and every facet of state government. Despite his party affiliation, he attained success at the local level with election as Burlington's city court judge, a position he held from 1878 to 1886. He served in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1886 to 1887, and was mayor of Burlington from 1891 to 1894. In April 1892, Haselton appointed Patrick J. Cosgrove to the police force; Cosgrove became chief of police in September 1931.

In 1894, President Grover Cleveland appointed Haselton as U.S. Minister to Venezuela. He served from July 1894 to May 1895, when he returned to Vermont after Cleveland requested his resignation. Haselton was asked to leave his post following a dispute with Admiral Richard Worsam Meade, the commander of the U.S. Navy's North Atlantic Squadron. In Meade's version, Haselton was ineffective in Caracas because he was drinking to excess during the workday. In Haselton's, Meade broke diplomatic protocol by rushing past Haselton to greet Venezuelan President Joaquín Crespo at a public event before Haselton could properly introduce him, and then continued one-on-one conversations with Crespo about policy matters without including Haselton.

See all
American judge (1848-1921)
User Avatar
No comments yet.