Hammond was born in 1863 in
Southborough, Massachusetts, the son of Ellen P. (Panton) and John Washington Hammond. His mother was born in England. He served from
Minnesota in the
United States House of Representatives in the
60th,
61st,
62nd, and
63rd congresses from March 4, 1907, to January 6, 1915. He was the 18th
governor of Minnesota from January 5, 1915, until his death on December 30, 1915. Hammond is just one of five Minnesota Democrats to win a gubernatorial election with a Democrat in the White House. He was the second governor of Minnesota to die in office.
Joseph Alfred Arner Burnquist succeeded him to the governorship to fill the vacancy left by Hammond's death. Minnesota's eighteenth governor had little time to effect significant change before he died in office. Had he lived longer, perhaps Hammond would have realized his ambitious plans to reorganize state government by minimizing bureaucracy and eliminating waste to make Minnesota's wheels turn more efficiently. Instead, his most notable legislation was the "county option bill," a restriction on liquor sales that pleased prohibition advocates. An inscription under Hammond's bust in the capitol describes him as "a scholar in politics". He earned bachelor's and master's degrees from
Dartmouth College and, upon moving to Mankato at age 21, became principal of its high school. He later studied law while he supervised schools in
Watonwan County. He made his permanent home in
St. James, where he practiced law and established himself as a political contender. A staunch Democrat in a Republican community, he lost his first bid for Congress in 1892, but perseverance and bipartisan support eventually brought him a congressional seat 14 years later. He interrupted his fourth consecutive term to leave Washington and run for governor. ==As Governor==