Theodore Erasmus Hilgard (7 July 1790, Marnheim – 14 February 1873, Heidelberg) was a lawyer, viticulturalist and Latin farmer.

Europe

He grew up during the Napoleonic Wars in a family very sympathetic to the principles of the French Revolution. He studied at the Universities of Heidelberg (1807), Göttingen (1808-9) and Paris (1810), and took a legal course in Coblenz (1811).[1] During the time of the French rule, he practiced law in Trèves, and, on the restoration of the Rhine Province to Germany, settled in Zweibrücken, where he held the appointment of associate justice of the court of appeals from 1821 till 1835. He was also a member of the provincial assembly from 1821 till 1826. He resigned as justice because of reactionary and bureaucratic policies instituted by the Bavarian government in the administration of justice in the Palatinate.[2] In 1816, he married Margarethe Pauli.[1]

United States

In 1835 he came to the United States, and settled in St. Clair County, Illinois. He purchased a farm near Belleville, and besides its general management gave much attention to viticulture, being the first to introduce it in Illinois. At first he tried to discover which of the Rhenish or French vines were best adapted to the climate, but soon found the indigenous Catawba grape most suitable, and he produced a wine that acquired a high local reputation.

The town of West Belleville, which gradually surrounded his original homestead, was laid out on his property and under his direction. He profitably sold a large part of his land as house lots.[2] Meanwhile, he gave special attention to the education of his children, whom he instructed personally in mathematics, languages and philosophy.-

Return to Germany

In 1851 he returned to Germany, having been invited by the Bavarian government to take part in recasting the law of mortgages of that country into a more modern form. Subsequently, he came back to the United States, but, finding his family dispersed, in 1854 he again returned to Germany with his new wife Maria Theveny.[2] He passed the remainder of his life quietly in Heidelberg.

Works

While on his farm in the United States he revived an early taste for poetry, and devoted a portion of his leisure to making translations of ancient and modern poems into German, some of which were published and received with high commendation, notably Ovid's Metamorphoses and "The Fire-Worshipers" from Thomas Moore's Lalla Rookh. Besides numerous legal and historical articles and minor poems contributed to American and European periodicals, he published:

  • Twelve Paragraphs on Pauperism (Heidelberg, 1847)
  • Ten Paragraphs on Constitutional Monarchy, and Republics (1849)
  • My Recollections, an autobiography (1858)
  • The Hundred Days, an Epic Poem (1859)

Family

Several of his children went on to noted careers:

  • Julius Erasmus Hilgard (January 7, 1825 – May 9, 1890) was an engineer.
  • Theodore Charles Hilgard (February 28, 1828 - March 5, 1875) was a physician.
  • Eugene Woldemar Hilgard (January 5, 1833 – January 8, 1916) was an expert on soils.

He was a granduncle of United States journalist and financier Henry Villard.

Notes

  1. 1 2 Marie-Luise Frings (1999). "Hilgard, Theodor Erasmus". American National Biography. Vol. 10 (online ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 767–8. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.2000476. (subscription required)
  2. 1 2 3 Albert B. Faust (1961). "Hilgard, Theodor Erasmus". Dictionary of American Biography. Vol. V, Part 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 23–4.

References

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