At the end of the war, Leggett returned to Zanesville and resumed his law practice. President
Ulysses S. Grant appointed him as
United States Commissioner of Patents in 1871; Leggett held that position until 1881, when he resigned to resume his private practice. In 1884, he founded a successful company that would become a part of
General Electric. Leggett was a member of the
Cuyahoga County Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument commission and helped oversee the construction of the monument which now sits on Cleveland's
Public Square. His likeness is depicted on the End of The War panel inside the structure and his name appears on plaques outside the main doors. His son, Mortimer M. Leggett, was accidentally killed on October 14, 1873, during an initiation to the
Cornell University chapter of the
Kappa Alpha Society. The younger Leggett was blindfolded and walking along a railroad trestle with other initiates, when he fell, striking the back of his head. Leggett was the first person known to die in a college fraternity initiation. Leggett died in
Cleveland, Ohio, aged 74, and was buried in
Lake View Cemetery. ==See also==