Joseph Albree Gilmore | |
Order: | 29th |
Office: | Governor of New Hampshire |
Term Start: | June 3, 1863 |
Term End: | June 8, 1865 |
Successor: | Frederick Smyth |
Office2: | President of the New Hampshire Senate |
Term Start2: | 1859 |
Term End2: | 1859 |
Office3: | Member of the New Hampshire Senate |
Term3: | 1858-1860 |
Birth Date: | 10 June 1811 |
Birth Place: | Weston, Vermont |
Party: | Republican |
Spouse: | Ann Page Whipple |
Children: | 11 |
Profession: | Businessman Railroad executive |
Signature: | Signature of Joseph Albree Gilmore (1811–1867).png |
Joseph Albree Gilmore (June 10, 1811 – April 17, 1867) was an American railroad superintendent from Concord, New Hampshire, and the 29th governor of New Hampshire from 1863 to 1865.
Joseph A. Gilmore was born in Weston, Vermont, on June 10, 1811.[1] He was educated in Vermont, and moved to Boston to learn the mercantile business. Gilmore then moved to Concord, New Hampshire, where he established a wholesale grocery business.
Gilmore became involved with the Concord and Claremont Railroad, serving first as a construction agent, and later as the railroad's general superintendent. He also served as superintendent of the Manchester and Lawrence Railroad and the Portsmouth and Concord Railroad.
Originally a Whig, Gilmore joined the Republican when it was founded in the mid-1850s. He served in the New Hampshire State Senate from 1858 to 1860, and was the Senate's President pro Tempore in 1859.
Gilmore was elected governor in 1863 and reelected in 1864, and served from June 3, 1863, to June 8, 1865. Serving during the American Civil War. Gilmore's term was consumed by support for the Union, including a loan to provide bonuses and supplemental salary payments to soldiers, and arranging for the transport of soldiers traveling to New Hampshire on furlough and returning to the front lines.
Gilmore died in Concord, New Hampshire, on April 17, 1867, and is buried at the Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[1] [2]
Gilmore was married to Ann Page Whipple, and they had eleven children.
Their daughter Ann was the first wife of Senator William E. Chandler.
Their son Joseph Henry Gilmore was a Newton Theological Seminary trained Baptist pastor, and wrote the words to the hymn "He Leadeth Me", inspired by the 23rd Psalm.