Hannibal Hamlin (born Aug. 27, 1809, Paris Hill, Maine, U.S.—died July 4, 1891, Bangor, Maine) was the 15th vice president of the United States (1861–65) in the Republican administration of President Abraham Lincoln.
Hamlin was the son of Cyrus Hamlin, a physician, sheriff, and farmer, and Anna Livermore. After practicing law, he entered politics as an antislavery Jacksonian Democrat and served in the Maine state legislature (1836–40). He was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1842 and to the Senate in 1848. In his first term as a senator, he took an antislavery position on sectional issues and left the Democratic Party in 1856 because of its endorsement of the Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854), which proponents of abolitionism had attacked as a capitulation to the interests of the slave states. He was elected Maine’s first Republican governor (1856) but resigned in February 1857 to return to the Senate.
The Republican National Convention of 1860 nominated Hamlin for vice president—a post he said he would have declined had he attended the convention in Chicago—in the belief that as an Easterner and former Democrat he would provide both regional and partisan balance to Lincoln. Although Lincoln rarely consulted him in office, Hamlin was an early supporter of emancipation and the arming of freedmen, steps that Lincoln later adopted. After failing to secure renomination in 1864—an outcome in which Lincoln played a decisive role—he became collector of the port of Boston, but he resigned in 1866 when he found himself out of step with the policies of President Andrew Johnson. Elected to the Senate again (1869–81), he supported radical Reconstruction and served as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. Hamlin later served for one year as minister to Spain (1881–82).