Hiram Willey | |
Birth Date: | 23 May 1818 |
Birth Place: | East Haddam, Connecticut |
Death Place: | Hadlyme, Connecticut |
Office: | Connecticut General Assembly |
Term Start: | 1847 |
Term End: | ? |
Term Start1: | 1857 |
Term End1: | ? |
Term Start2: | 1877 |
Term End2: | ? |
Term End3: | 1860 |
Term Start3: | 1859 |
Office3: | Connecticut Senate |
Term End4: | 1861 |
Term Start4: | 1860 |
Office4: | Connecticut Probate Courts Judge |
Successor5: | Fredrick L. Allen |
Predecessor5: | Jonathan N. Harris |
Term End5: | 1865 |
Term Start5: | 1862 |
Office5: | Mayor of New London, Connecticut |
Successor6: | Calvin G. Child |
Predecessor6: | Tilton E. Doolittle |
Term End6: | 1869 |
Term Start6: | 1861 |
President6: | Abraham Lincoln Andrew Johnson |
Office6: | United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut |
Term End7: | 1873 |
Term Start7: | 1870 |
Office7: | Connecticut Judge of Common Pleas |
Children: | 2 |
Alma Mater: | Wesleyan University (1839) |
Hiram Willey (May 5, 1818 – March 8, 1910) was an American attorney who served as the United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut under two presidents.[1] He was also a judge, member of the Connecticut senate, author, and the mayor of New London, Connecticut.
Hiram was born on May 5, 1818, to Eathan Allen Willey and Mary Brockway in East Haddam, Connecticut. His ancestors moved to Connecticut in 1645 and his grandfather Abraham Willey was a captain in the Revolutionary War. He was one of the first graduates of Wesleyan University of Middletown graduating in 1839. After passing the bar in 1841,[2] he would be involved in numerous political and legal positions throughout Connecticut. He became State's Attorney; was a member of the Legislature and State Senate; Mayor of New London; Judge of Probate Court and of the Court of Common Pleas;[3] returned to Hadlyme to reside in 1875; was lay reader in the P.E. Church of Hadlyme, member of F.& A.M.; First Grand Commander of the Encampment in New London.[4] As the mayor of New London, he established the cities police force.[5] In addition he wrote multiple books and was a professor at Yale.[6]