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Bailey Hardeman

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Davidson County, Southwest Territory, United States
Death: September 25, 1836 (41)
Caney Creek, Matagorda County, Texas, United States
Place of Burial: Austin, Travis County, Texas, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Thomas Hardeman and Mary Hardin Hardeman
Husband of Rebecca Amanda Fitzallens Hardeman
Father of Samuel Wilson Hardeman; John Hardeman; Emeline H. Hardeman; Catherine Hardeman and Thomas Hardeman
Brother of Isabella Perkins Holt; Nicholas Perkins Hardeman; Nancy Anna Lewis; Mary Ann Adkins; John Hardeman and 11 others

Occupation: War of 1812 veteran
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Bailey Hardeman

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=18047&ref=wvr

Bailey Hardeman was the first Secretary of the Treasury under Sam Houston in Texas.

He accepted General Santa Ana's sword when he surrendered. A painting of the surrender hangs outside the Govenor's office in Austin, Texas.


HARDEMAN, BAILEY (1795–1836).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bailey_Hardeman

Bailey Hardeman, War of 1812 soldier, Santa Fe trader, mountain man, a founder and officer of the Republic of Texas, thirteenth of fourteen children of Thomas and Mary (Perkins) Hardeman, was born at the Thomas Hardeman station or stockade, near Nashville, on February 26, 1795.

His father was a prominent frontiersman who served in the North Carolina convention that considered ratifying the United States Constitution at Hillsboro, North Carolina, and in the Tennessee state constitutional convention of 1796.

Bailey spent his early years in Davidson and Williamson counties, Tennessee. He was a store proprietor, deputy sheriff of Williamson County, and lawyer in Tennessee. At eighteen he served as an artillery officer in the War of 1812 under his father's friend Andrew Jackson in Louisiana.

On June 19, 1820, he married Rebecca Wilson, also of Williamson County. The next year he joined his father and his brother John on the Missouri frontier west of Old Franklin. There he met William Becknell and became involved in the early Santa Fe trade. Hardeman was in the Meredith Miles Marmaduke expedition to New Mexico in 1824–25. He and Becknell trapped beaver along the Colorado River north and west of Santa Cruz and Taos and narrowly escaped starvation during the winter of 1824–25. On his return trip to Missouri, he lost two horses and a mule to Osage Indian attackers, but his overall trading profits must have been considerable. He was able to finance the Santa Fe trading trip of William Scott in the summer of 1825. Several years later he endowed Hardeman Academy at Hardeman's Cross Roads (later Triune), donated lands to Wilson's Creek Baptist Church, and opened a tavern and store, all in Williamson County, Tennessee.

A few years after his return to Tennessee he moved from Williamson to Hardeman County. In the fall of 1835 he and his brothers Thomas Jones and Blackstone Hardeman and his sister Julia Ann Bacon, together with their families, numbering about twenty-five people in all, moved to Texas. Bailey and several other members of the family quickly joined the independence movement. Bailey's first involvement was to help secure an eighteen-pound cannon at Dimmitt's Landing near the mouth of the Lavaca River and haul it to San Antonio, an action that encouraged Gen. Martín Perfecto de Cos to surrender his forces, on December 10, 1835. On November 28, while Hardeman was on the artillery assignment, the General Council of the provisional government appointed him to serve on a commission to organize the militia of Matagorda Municipality.

After this, Hardeman's activities shifted from the military to the political arena. He was elected a representative from Matagorda to the convention at work on the Texas Declaration of Independence. He arrived at Washington-on-the-Brazos on March 1, 1836, and was selected to serve on the five-member drafting committee of the declaration. After the convention approved the document, Bailey, along with two other members of the committee, was appointed to a twenty-one-member committee to draw up a constitution for the Republic of Texas. The resulting Constitution was approved in mid-March. Hardeman performed several other services for the convention, including membership on the militia and tariff-payment committees. Although he requested to be excused in order to rejoin the military forces, he was persuaded to assume other political duties. The delegates elected him secretary of the treasury. Concurrently with this position, he held the office of secretary of state when Samuel P. Carson left for the United States on April 2–3, 1836.

After the fall of the Alamo, Hardeman fled eastward with other cabinet members as the ad interim government moved from Washington to Harrisburg, and from Harrisburg to Galveston Island, in advance of approaching Mexican troops. The group reached Galveston in safety around the time of the battle of San Jacinto; after the Texas victory, Hardeman left the island to deliver supplies to the soldiers of the republic. As acting secretary of state he negotiated and signed two treaties, an open document honorably ending the war and providing for removal of Mexican soldiers from Texas, and a secret agreement in which Mexican general Antonio López de Santa Anna promised diplomatic recognition of the new republic. Hardeman was then appointed to go to Mexico City in order to help secure ratification of the open treaty.

His service to the republic was cut short by his death from congestive fever, probably on September 25, 1836, at his Matagorda County home on Caney Creek. He was buried there, but in 1936 his remains were moved to the State Cemetery in Austin. Bailey was survived by his wife and four children. A daughter had died at the age of eight in Hardeman County, Tennessee. Hardeman County, Texas, was named for Bailey and Thomas Jones Hardeman.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Sam Houston Dixon, Men Who Made Texas Free (Houston: Texas Historical Publishing, 1924). Nicholas P. Hardeman, Wilderness Calling: The Hardeman Family in the American Westward Movement, 1750–1900 (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1977). Louis Wiltz Kemp, The Signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence (Salado, Texas: Anson Jones, 1944; rpt. 1959).



Bailey Hardeman (1795–1836) was the first Secretary of the Treasury for the Republic of Texas. Bailey was a younger son of Thomas Hardeman and his first wife Mary Perkins. Both families were early settlers in Tidewater Virginia. Thomas Hardeman was a Revolutionary War soldier and served for years as a representative from Davidson County both when it was the Territory South of the Ohio, North Carolina and Tennessee. Bailey served as a First Lt in the War of 1812 from Tennessee, he was the first County Clerk for Hardeman County, Tennessee. Hardeman County TN was named for the brother Bailey and Thomas J. Hardeman. Both brothers were part of the first Republic of Texas Government.

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Bailey Hardeman's Timeline

1795
February 26, 1795
Davidson County, Southwest Territory, United States
1821
March 23, 1821
Williamson, TN, United States
1823
1823
1827
June 18, 1827
Williamson, TN, United States
1829
1829
Williamson, TN, United States
1831
1831
Williamson, TN, United States
1836
September 25, 1836
Age 41
Caney Creek, Matagorda County, Texas, United States
????
Texas State Cemetery, Austin, Travis County, Texas, United States