Thomas Devereux Hogg

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Thomas Devereux Hogg

Birthdate:
Death: September 30, 1904 (80)
Place of Burial: Raleigh, Wake, North Carolina, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Gavin Hogg and Mary Ann Bayard Hogg
Husband of Janet Hogg
Father of Sallie Hogg; Janet Bryan Hawkins and Lucy Dortch

Managed by: Erin Ishimoticha
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Thomas Devereux Hogg

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/hogg-thomas-devereux

Thomas Devereux Hogg, businessman and philanthropist, was born in Raleigh. His father, Gavin Hogg (1788–1835), a native of Wick, Caithness, Scotland, settled in Raleigh after having lived in Bertie County. His mother was the former Mary Ann Bayard Johnson (1802–30) of Stratford, Conn., a descendant of Samuel Johnson, first president of Kings College, and of his son William Samuel Johnson, first president of the school after it became Columbia University.

Hogg obtained his early education at the Episcopal School for Boys (later St. Mary's School and Junior College), Raleigh, and at Isaac Webb's preparatory school in Middletown, Conn., where Rutherford B. Hayes was a classmate. After graduation in 1844 from the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University), he obtained the M.D. degree from the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia, although he did not remain active in the practice of medicine.

A resident of Raleigh thereafter, except for a short time in New Orleans, Hogg was, according to his obituary, "an active participant in every movement which tended to the upbuilding of his state." A major stockholder in the Raleigh and Gaston Railroad, completed in 1840, he was instrumental in securing financial aid for that company as well as for the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad at crucial periods in their development. In the 1850s he promoted the proposed Greenville and Raleigh and other plank roads. Appointed by Governor David Reid in 1853 to the board of commissioners for the State Hospital for the Insane (later renamed Dorothea Dix Hospital), Hogg was a member of the three-man executive committee during construction of the institution's first buildings. As an incorporator, director, and stockholder of the Raleigh Gaslight Company, chartered in 1859, he spearheaded the company's successful effort to furnish Raleigh with gas. The same year a group of citizens, who according to the Raleigh Standard preferred "the brightness of gaslight to the dripping dimness of the olden style," presented him a silver pitcher inscribed "as a mark of their appreciation of his public spirit and enterprise." Earlier he had also been a Raleigh city commissioner, representing the Eastern Ward in 1852 and serving as a member of a special "Fire and Water Committee," which, after the widely destructive fire of December 1851, reorganized and augmented Raleigh's fire department and improved the water supply.

In January 1860 Hogg was elected first president of the Oak City Savings Bank, chartered by the General Assembly of 1858–59. In April 1861, his fellow commissioners elected him president of the board of the Chatham Railroad (later the Raleigh and Augusta). Among other antebellum interests was his partnership with Robert W. Haywood in the Raleigh Planing Mills, which began operating near Raleigh in the summer of 1853. In the federal census of 1860, Hogg was listed as owning 22,000 acres of land in Wake County.

Hogg opposed separation from the Union until North Carolina seceded; he was then commissioned a major and served from September 1861 throughout the Civil War as chief commissary of the Subsistence Department of North Carolina. In his brief postwar report on its operations, he wrote that before the end of the war his department was "feeding about half of Lee's army," a statement with which editor-historian Walter Clark and others concurred.

His business interests after the war included grape culture in a vineyard near Raleigh owned jointly with Henry Mahler, and a partnership in a Baltimore distillery with James L. Bryan, his late wife's uncle. The state of North Carolina appointed him inspector of the North Carolina Railroad in 1871, following lease of the line to the Richmond and Danville Railroad Company.

When Mayor Joseph Separk died in office in 1875, the Raleigh board of aldermen elected Hogg to succeed him. He declined, reported the Raleigh Sentinel, "on the ground that his private engagements would not admit of his giving that attention which the office would require." He served the following year, however, as a member of the board, representing the First (Northeast) Ward. For some years thereafter he advocated, albeit unsuccessfully, the building of a steel roadway for vehicles in Raleigh's streets, which remained unpaved until after 1886. Towards the end of his life, he served as a delegate—appointed by Governor Thomas Holt—to the Nicaraguan Canal Convention of 2 June 1892 in St. Louis, Mo.

On 13 Dec. 1848, Hogg married Janet Bryan (9 Feb. 1831–22 Feb. 1855), of Plymouth, the daughter of John Stevens and Lucy Davis Haywood Bryan and granddaughter of Sherwood Haywood of Raleigh. In 1850 they built the residence that until 1962 occupied the entire square on which the Archives and History/State Library building was constructed in 1969. Mrs. Hogg died shortly after the birth of their third daughter Lucy, who later married Isaac Foote Dortch and was the mother of eight children. The oldest daughter, Sally, did not marry; the second, Janet, married Colin Hawkins but had no children.

An Episcopalian, Hogg was a lifelong member of Christ Church, Raleigh, where he served as senior warden and treasurer for a number of years. Politically, he was a Whig. He was the author of two short treatises on mining interests and municipal improvements; copies of both are in the North Carolina Collection, University of North Carolina Library, Chapel Hill.

An accident claimed the life of Hogg in Raleigh; he was buried in Oakwood Cemetery from Christ Church. Portrait miniatures, a daguerreotype, and photographs of Hogg are in the possession of his granddaughter, Miss Elizabeth Dortch of Raleigh, who also owns the 1859 silver pitcher described above.

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https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/41856019/thomas-devereux-hogg

Thomas Devereaux Hogg was born 1823 in Raleigh, Wake County, NC, the only surviving child of prominent businessman and attorney, Gavin Hogg of Scotland, and his (1st) wife, Mary Ann Bayard Johnson. Several other children were born to his parents, but they died in infancy.

Thomas was the paternal grandson of James Hogg & Mary Finlayson of Wick, Caithness, Scotland who immigrated to Wilmington, NC about 1757. On his mother's side, he was the maternal grandson of Robert Charles Johnson & Catherine Ann Bayard of Stratford, Fairfield Co, CT, an eminent jurist, who, with John Jay, organized that part of the U. S. Constitution which relates to the Supreme Court. His maternal gr-grandparents were the Hon. Nicholas Bayard Jr. & Catherine Livingston of New York, a prominent merchant from a distinguished Huguenot family who settled in New York in the 17th century and allied itself to such prominent dynasties as the Stuyvesants and the Jays.

Thomas Hogg was a 25-year old physician when he married 17-year old Janet Bryan on December 13, 1848, daughter of John Stevens Bryan & Lucy Davis Haywood. The couple would reside in Raleigh where Dr. Hogg had a practice, and would become parents to 3 known children -- all daughters: Sally Hogg (1850-1918), Janet Bryan Hogg (1852-1928), and Lucy Hogg (1855-1905).

Dr. Hogg was appointed to the Board of Commissioners for the State Hospital for the Insane (later renamed Dorothea Dix Hospital). He was also an incorporator, director, and stockholder of the Raleigh Gaslight Company, chartered in 1859. In 1860, he became the president of the Oak City Savings Bank. His antebellum business activities also included a partnership with his wife's uncle, James L. Bryan, in a Baltimore distillery and one with Robert W. Haywood in the Raleigh Planing Mills, which began operation in the summer of 1853. During the Civil War, he was chief commissary officer of the Subsistence Department of North Carolina.

In 1855, Dr. Hogg was widowed when his wife of just 7 years died at age 24 giving birth to their daughter Lucy. Thomas never remarried, and remained in Raleigh where he raised his daughters. He survived his wife 49 years, passing in 1904 at age 80.

Of his children, eldest daughter Sallie/Sally never married and died at age 68. Janet Bryan Hogg married wealthy businessman Colin McKenzie Hawkins and resided in Raleigh. Their marriage was childless. Lucy Hogg married wealthy attorney Isaac Foote Dortch of Goldsboro and had 8 children. All his daughters are buried here in Oakwood.

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Thomas Devereux Hogg's Timeline

1823
October 1, 1823
1850
August 1850
1852
December 28, 1852
1855
February 22, 1855
Raleigh, Wake, North Carolina, United States
1904
September 30, 1904
Age 80
????
Oakwood Cemetery, Raleigh, Wake, North Carolina, United States