Background
Born in Granby, Connecticut, Hayes moved with his father"s family to Louisiana Salle County, Illinois.
officer politician representative
Born in Granby, Connecticut, Hayes moved with his father"s family to Louisiana Salle County, Illinois.
He attended the country schools and graduated from Oberlin (Ohio) College in 1860 and from the Theological Seminary, Oberlin, Ohio, in 1863.
He enlisted in the Union Army during the Civil War and was commissioned as a captain in the 103rd Ohio Infantry on July 16, 1862. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel on November 18, 1864. In the omnibus promotions following the surrender of Confederate forces in the spring of 1865, he was brevetted colonel and brigadier general, dating from March 13, 1865.
Following the war, Hayes returned to Ohio.
He became the superintendent of schools in Mount Vernon, Ohio, in 1866. He moved to Circleville, Ohio, in 1867, and then to Bryan, Ohio, in 1869.
In 1874, Hayes moved from Ohio to Morris, Illinois. He served as delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1872.
Hayes was elected as a Republican to the 45th United States Congress in 1876, unseating independent incumbent Alexander Campbell, a theoretician of the Greenback movement.
And was re-elected to the Forty-sixth Congress in 1878. He was not a candidate for renomination in 1880. He moved to Joliet, Illinois, in 1892, where he resumed journalism.
Philip C. Hayes died in Joliet on July 13, 1916, and was interred in Elmhurst Cemetery.