Thomas Hamlin Hubbard (December 20, 1838 – May 19, 1915) was a Union Army colonel from Maine during the Civil War who was awarded the honorary grade of brevetbrigadier general, United States Volunteers, for meritorious service.[1] After the war, Hubbard was a lawyer, railroad executive, financier, businessman and philanthropist.[2]
Soldier, lawyer, philanthropist, and financier, Hubbard was best known for his enthusiasm for Arctic exploration, which contributed to the discovery of the North Pole. Following the death of founding President Morris K. Jesup in 1908, he became President of the Peary Arctic Club, which had been formed in 1898 to give Admiral Robert E. Peary financial backing in his polar quest. Even after this quest had ended in success Hubbard's interest in the frozen north did not end, and he was one of the financial contributors to the Donald B. MacMillan expedition in the Arctic studying the native population.
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Early life
Hubbard was born in Hallowell, Maine, December 20, 1838.[2] He was the second son of Maine governor Dr. John Hubbard, who signed the unpopular Maine Liquor Law in 1851.[4] After graduating from Bowdoin College in 1857 and studying law, he was admitted to the bar. He then moved to New York and began studies at Albany Law School. He received his LL.B. in 1861, and was admitted to the New York bar.[5]
He had a hand in the construction of the famous Red River Dam, which was built to raise the water level so that Federal gunboats which had run aground could be floated out of danger, and his services as a whole were so conspicuous and so valuable that on June 2, 1864 he was made colonel of his regiment. He succeeded Colonel Francis Fessenden, who had been promoted to brigadier general, U.S. Volunteers, May 10, 1864.[7] Hubbard resigned his commission on July 23, 1865.[6] On January 13, 1866, PresidentAndrew Johnson nominated Hubbard to the honorary grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from March 13, 1865.[8] The United States Senate confirmed the award on March 12, 1866.[8]
Post-war life
On January 28, 1868, Hubbard married Sibyl A. Fahnestock of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Two sons of this marriage died in childhood. Three children survived him, John and Anna W. Hubbard, and Mrs. Herbert S. Darlington.[9]
Hubbard was a philanthropist to many causes. Bowdoin College was a favorite object of his benefactions, and among the donations that remain are the splendid Hubbard Hall (designed by Henry Vaughan) and the fine grand stand which displays the motto, "Fair Play, and May the Best Man Win."
A more enduring monument is Cape Thomas Hubbard, which, from the wind-swept coast of Grant Land, faces the North Pole across reaches of grinding pack-ice, over which Robert E. Peary, another Bowdoin man, carried the Stars and Stripes in 1909.[10]