Actions
Begin New Search
Refine Last Search
Cemetery Lookup
Add Burial Records
Help with Find A Grave

Find all Carpenters in:
 • Oak Hill Cemetery
 • Washington
 • District of Columbia
 • District Of Columbia
 • Find A Grave

Top Contributors
Success Stories
Discussion Forums
Find A Grave Store
Support Find A Grave

Log In
Matthew Hale Carpenter
Birth: Dec. 22, 1824
Moretown
Washington County
Vermont, USA
Death: Feb. 24, 1881
Washington
District of Columbia
District Of Columbia, USA

US Senator from Wisconsin. Born Decatur Merritt Hammond Carpenter, the Vermont native attended West Point (1843 to 1845), studied law, and became a practicing attorney in Boston, Massachusetts in 1847. The following year he moved to Beloit, Wisconsin, where he changed his name to Matthew Hale Carpenter and served as District Attorney for Rock County (1850 to 1854). In 1858 he settled in Milwaukee, winning a reputation for tackling cases that involved important social issues of the day. Carpenter was a Democrat throughout his early career and supported the presidential bid of Stephen Douglas in 1860, but as a Unionist in the Civil War years he switched to the Republican Party. In 1868 he won his first term representing Wisconsin in the US Senate, serving from March 4, 1869 to March 3, 1875. During his time on Capitol Hill he was the Senate's President pro tempore (1873 to 1875) and chairman of the Committee on Enrolled Bills (1871 to 1873) and the Committee to Audit and Control the Contigent Expense (1873 to 1875). A staunch supporter of President Grant, Carpenter was unfairly identified with the corruption associated with that administration, and several unpopular stances (such as his support of railroad regulation) lost him support at home. Defeated for reelection in 1874, he resumed private law practice with offices in Milwaukee and Washington DC. Nicknamed "The Webster of the West", Carpenter was acknowledged as one of the greatest constitutional lawyers of his time. He argued his first case before the US Supreme Court in 1862 and continued to do so while in the Senate. In "Bradwell vs. State" (1872) he argued for the right for women to become attorneys; in the "Slaughterhouse Cases" (1873) he convinced the court that the 14th Amendment did not prohibit states from regulating big business. He also defended Secretary of War William W. Belknap in his US House impeachment proceedings (1876) and represented candidate Samuel J. Tilden before the commission investigating the disputed 1876 presidential election. By 1878 Carpenter was again in his party's good graces and was reelected to the US Senate, serving from March 4, 1879 until his death. He died at 56 in Washington DC from complications of diabetes. After temporary interment in Oak Hill Cemetery, his remains were brought back to Milwaukee for reburial at Forest Home Cemetery. (bio by: Bobb Edwards) 

 
Search Amazon for Matthew Carpenter
 
Burial:
Oak Hill Cemetery *
Washington
District of Columbia
District Of Columbia, USA
*Former burial location
 
Maintained by: Find A Grave
Originally Created by: Fred Sanford
Record added: Nov 16, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 80554207
Matthew Hale Carpenter
Added by: Anonymous
 
Matthew Hale Carpenter
Cemetery Photo
Added by: Bernadette Loeffel - Atkins
 
Photos may be scaled.
Click on image for full size.

I light a candle for Matthew Hale Carpenter ...
- Candles
 Added: Jan. 21, 2012

- Kid
 Added: Nov. 23, 2011

- God Bless You Dearest Angel ~ Rhonda Sue
 Added: Nov. 23, 2011
There are 4 more notes not showing...
Click here to view all notes...
How famous was this person?
Current ranking for this person: (4.0 after 11 votes)
 

Accuracy and Copyright Disclaimer