This article appears to contradict the article James S. Matthews. Please discuss at the talk page and do not remove this message until the contradictions are resolved.(April 2021)
Hiram Roswell Steele (July 10, 1842 – November 21, 1929) was a Canadian-American lawyer, judge, and Louisiana Attorney General.
He studied law in the law office of his brother, future Vermont Supreme Court justice Benjamin H. Steele, in Derby Line.[2] In July 1862, during the American Civil War, he helped raise men for military service in Derby Line, Newport, and Orleans County. In August 1862, he was commissioned Captain of Company K, 10th Vermont Infantry Regiment.[2] He served with the company for the next two years. In May 1864, he was severely wounded in the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House. Two weeks later, President Lincoln promoted him to captain and Commissary of Subsistence, and in June he was reported to report for duty in New Orleans, Louisiana. In August, he was assigned Commissary of Subsistence of the cavalry forces, Nineteenth Army Corps, on the staff of General E. J. Davis. In February 1865, he was assigned Commissary of Subsistence of a separate cavalry brigade on the staff of Brigadier-General T. J. Lucas. In July, he was transferred and assigned to Natchez, Mississippi, on the staff of Major-General J. W. Davidson as Depot and Post Commissary at Natchez and Chief Commissary of the Southern District of Mississippi. He was mustered out in January 1866, and was breveted Major in May 1866.[2]
Steele remained in the South after the war, initially working in cotton planting. In 1868, he began practicing law in St. Joseph, Louisiana.[3] He was also elected Parish Judge of Tensas Parish that year and was re-elected to that office in 1870. In 1871, he was appointed District Attorney of the Thirteenth Judicial District of Louisiana and he was elected to a full term in that office in 1872. In 1875, he was appointed Assistant Attorney General of Louisiana, and later that year Governor Kellogg appointed him Judge of the Superior Criminal Court of New Orleans. In 1876, he was appointed Attorney General of Louisiana. After his term as Attorney General expired, he was elected and re-elected District Attorney of the Thirteenth Judicial District. He also served as a member of the 1868 Louisiana Constitutional Convention and the 1879 Louisiana Constitutional Convention. He was a Republican and considered a "carpetbagger", but he was popular with both parties.[2]