Augustus Pingry Hunton was born in Groton, New Hampshire, on February 23, 1816.[1] He was raised in Hyde Park and Johnson, Vermont, studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1837.[2][3]
Hunton practiced in Stockbridge, Bethel and Chelsea before settling permanently in Bethel in 1848. Hunton usually practiced in conjunction with one other attorney, and one of his early partners was GovernorJulius Converse. In addition, Hunton was a relative of Lt. Col. Samuel Pingree, later Governor of Vermont, and Samuel's brother Stephen M. Pingree, both of whom studied law with Hunton before forming the Hartford firm of Pingree and Pingree.[4]
Political career
Originally a Whig, he became a Republican when the party was organized in the mid-1850s. Hunton represented Bethel in the Vermont House of Representatives In 1849, 1854, and 1859 to 1862. From 1860 to 1862 Hunton served as Speaker.[5][6][7]
During the Civil War Hunton was superintendent of Union Army recruiting for Windsor County.[10] In 1864 he was a delegate to the Republican National Convention which nominated Abraham Lincoln.[11][2] After the war Hunton was a U.S. Pension Notary, responsible for verifying the documents presented by claimants before they were delivered to Vermont's U.S. Pension Agents.[12]
Hunton died in Bethel on June 20, 1911.[15] He was buried in Bethel's Cherry Hill Cemetery, of which he was an original incorporator.[16][17] Hunton was married to Caroline Paige of Bethel, and had two children, Mary and Albert.[2] His granddaughter Mary Stickney married State attorney Robert Ashton Lawrence, family member of Capt. Elihu Yale of the Yale family.[18][19][20]
Notes
^New Hampshire, Births and Christenings Index, 1714-1904, entry for Augustus P. Hunton, accessed January 29, 2012