Person:Thomas Bennett (78)

Watchers
     
Brig. Gen. Thomas Warren Bennett, Esq.
d.1893
Facts and Events
Name Brig. Gen. Thomas Warren Bennett, Esq.
Gender Male
Birth? 1831 Union, Indiana, United States
Other? Oct 1854 Indiana, United Stateselected state senator representing Fayette and Union Counties
Military? Abt 1862 Indiana, United StatesCapt., 15th Reg of Indiana Volunteers
Military? Oct 1862 Indiana, United Statesappointed Colonel, 69th Reg. by Gov. Morton
Other? 1869 Richmond, Wayne, Indiana, United Stateselected Mayor of Richmond
Other? From 1871 to 1875 appointed Territorial Governor of Idaho by President Grant
Other? 1875 elected to Congress
Other? From 1877 to 1883 Richmond, Wayne, Indiana, United Stateselected Mayor of Richmond
Other? From 1885 to 1887 Richmond, Wayne, Indiana, United Stateselected Mayor of Richmond
Death? 1893

Research Notes

[Source: Morrisson-Reeves Library, Richmond, Indiana U.S.A]

Thomas Warren Bennett was born in Union County, Indiana, where his father was a farmer. In 1850 he left to attend Indiana Asbury University (now DePauw University) where he received his law degree in 1855. He returned to Liberty and practiced law until the beginning of the Civil War. At the first call for troops, he raised a company of volunteers and was commissioned a captain in what became the 15th Regiment of Indiana Volunteers. In October 1862 Governor Morton appointed him Colonel of the 69th Regiment, and with this unit he participated in the battles leading to the fall of Vicksburg in July 1863. Promoted to Brigadier General soon after, he led his brigade in the Red River Campaign. In September 1864 the War Department detailed him to serve on the military tribunal which tried a group of conspirators, known as the "Sons of Liberty." These sympathizers of the South had plotted to murder Governor Morton and force Indiana to seceed.

In October 1864 he was elected state senator representing Fayette and Union Counties. In 1868, he moved to Richmond and was elected mayor the following year. He had served for two years in Richmond before President Grant appointed him Territorial Governor of Idaho. He was governor until 1875 when he was elected to Congress, in which he served one year.

In 1876 he returned to Richmond and resumed his law practice. He served as mayor again from 1877-1883 and 1885-1887. He was responsible for renaming the city streets in 1881 to the current system of numbers beginning at the Whitewater River, and letters north and south from Main Street.

General Bennett was an active member of the Grand Army of the Republic veterans group and also served as the president of the Indiana State Pension Association.

References
  1.   Family Recorded, in Young, Andrew White. History of Wayne County, Indiana from its first settlement to the present time: with numerous biographial and family sketches; embellished with upwards of fifty portraits of citizens and views of buildings. (Cincinnati, Ohio: R. Clarke, 1872)
    411-412.
  2.   Family Recorded, in Biographical and genealogical history of Wayne, Fayette, Union and Franklin Counties, Indiana. (Chicago, Illinois: Chicago : Lewis, 1899)
    392-395.
  3.   Bennett, Thomas, in Wayne County Pamphlet File.