USA > Kentucky > A history of Kentucky > Part 19
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21
SEC. 260. Delegates to such convention shall be elected at the next general State election after the passage of the act calling the conven- tion, which does not occur within less than ninety days ; and they shall meet within ninety days after their election at the Capital of the State, and continue in session until their work is completed.
SEC. 261. The General Assembly, in the act calling the convention, shall provide for comparing the polls and giving certificates of election to the delegates elected, and provide for their compensation.
SEC. 262. The convention, when assembled, shall be the judge of the election and qualification of its members, and shall determine con- tested elections ; but the General Assembly shall, in the act calling
270
CONSTITUTION OF KENTUCKY
the convention, provide for taking testimony in such cases, and for issuing a writ of election in case of a tie.
SEC. 263. Before a vote is taken upon the question of calling a con- vention, the secretary of state shall cause notice of the election to be published in such manner as may be provided by the act directing said vote to be taken.
SCHEDULE.
That no inconvenience may arise from the alterations and amend- ments made in this Constitution, and in order to carry the same into complete operation, it is hereby declared and ordained :-
I. That all laws of this Commonwealth in force at the time of the adoption of this Constitution, not inconsistent therewith, shall remain in full force until altered or repealed by the General Assembly ; and all rights, actions, prosecutions, claims, and contracts of the State, coun- ties, individuals, or bodies corporate, not inconsistent therewith, shall continue as valid as if this Constitution had not been adopted. The provisions of all laws which are inconsistent with this Constitution shall cease upon its adoption, except that all laws which are inconsistent with such provisions as require legislation to enforce them shall remain in force until such legislation is had, but not longer than six years after the adoption of this Constitution, unless sooner amended or repealed by the General Assembly.
2. That all recognizances, obligations, and all other instruments entered into or executed before the adoption of this Constitution, to the State, or to any city, town, county, or subdivision thereof, and all fines, taxes, penalties, and forfeitures due or owing to this State, or to any city, town, county, or subdivision thereof ; and all writs, prosecu- tions, actions and causes of action, except as otherwise herein provided, shall continue and remain unaffected by the adoption of this Constitu- tion ; and all indictments which shall have been found, or may hereafter be found, for any crime or offense committed before this Constitution takes effect, may be prosecuted as if no change had taken place, except as otherwise provided in this Constitution.
3. All circuit, chancery, criminal, law and equity, law, and common pleas courts, as now constituted and organized by law, shall continue with their respective jurisdictions until the judges of the circuit courts provided for in this Constitution shall have been elected and qualified, and shall then cease and determine ; and the causes, actions, and pro- ceedings then pending in said first-named courts, which are discontin- ued by this Constitution, shall be transferred to, and tried by, the circuit courts in the counties, respectively, in which said causes, actions, and proceedings are pending.
4. The treasurer, attorney-general, auditor of public accounts, super- intendent of public instruction, and register of the land office, elected in eighteen hundred and ninety-one, shall hold their offices until the first Monday in January, eighteen hundred and ninety-six, and until the election and qualification of their successors. The governor and lieutenant-governor elected in eighteen hundred and ninety-one shall
271
CONSTITUTION OF KENTUCKY
hold their offices until the sixth Tuesday after the first Monday in November, eighteen hundred and ninety-five, and until their succes- sors are elected and qualified. The governor and treasurer elected in eighteen hundred and ninety-one shall be ineligible to the succeeding term. The governor elected in eighteen hundred and ninety-one may appoint a secretary of state and a commissioner of agriculture, labor, and statistics, as now provided, who shall hold their offices until their successors are elected and qualified, unless sooner removed by the gov- ernor. The official bond of the present treasurer shall be renewed at the expiration of two years from the time of his qualification.
5. All officers who may be in office at the adoption of this Constitu- tion, or who may be elected before the election of their successors, as provided in this Constitution, shall hold their respective offices until their successors are elected or appointed and qualified as provided in this Constitution.
6. The quarterly courts created by this Constitution shall be the successors of the present statutory quarterly courts in the several coun- ties of this State ; and all suits, proceedings, prosecutions, records, and judgments now pending or being in said last-named courts, shall, after the adoption of this Constitution, be transferred to the quarterly courts created by this Constitution, and shall proceed as though the same had been therein instituted.
ORDINANCE.
We, the representatives of the people of Kentucky, in Convention assembled, in their name and by their authority and in virtue of the power vested in us as delegates from the counties and districts respec- tively affixed to our names, do ordain and proclaim the foregoing to be the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Kentucky from and after this date.
Done at Frankfort this twenty-eighth day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-one, and in the ninety-ninth* year of the Commonwealth.
CASSIUS M. CLAY, JR., President of the Convention, and Member from the County 1 of Bourbon.
THOMAS G. POORE,
Secretary.
* Error : should be " one hundredth."
272
CONSTITUTION OF KENTUCKY
AMENDMENT OF 1902, ADDED TO SECTION 181.
And the General Assembly may, by general laws only, authorize cities or towns of any class to provide for taxation for municipal purposes on personal property, tangible and intangible, based on income, licenses or franchises, in lieu of an ad valorem tax thereon: provided, cities of the first class shall not be authorized to omit the imposition of an ad valorem tax on such property of any steam railroad, street railway, ferry, bridge, gas, water, heating, telephone, telegraph, electric light or electric power company.
AMENDMENT OF 1908, ADDED TO SECTION 177.
The credit of the Commonwealth may be given, pledged or loaned to any county of the Commonwealth for public road purposes, and any county may be permitted to incur an indebtedness in any amount fixed by the county, not in excess of five percentum of the value of the taxable property therein, for public road purposes in said county, provided said additional indebtedness is submitted to the voters of the county for their ratification or rejection at a special election held for said purpose, in such manner as may be provided by law, and when any such indebtedness is incurred by any county said county may levy, in addition to the tax rate allowed under section 157 of the Constitution of Kentucky, an amount not exceeding twenty cents on the one hundred dollars of the assessed valuation of said county for the purpose of paying the interest on said indebtedness and providing a sinking fund for the payment of said indebtedness.
INDEX
Abolition movement, opposition to and effect of, 152, 153; extreme disapproval of, 154, 155; war a necessity for, 173; favored by Congress, 186; slavery abolished in Dis- trict of Columbia, 186; Emancipation Proc- lamation issued, 196; Thirteenth Amend- ment passed, 203.
Act of Separation, first, 62, 63; second, 66. Adair, Major John, defeated at Fort St. Clair,
97; at battle of the Thames, 125; elected governor, 129.
Adams, John Quincy, elected President, 134. Adams, Major George M., elected to Con- gress, 207.
Adventures of Colonel Daniel Boone, by John Filson, 56.
Agricultural and Mechanical College estab- lished, 212.
Alabama secedes, 162.
Alexander, Robert, president of Bank of Ken- tucky, 113.
Alien and Sedition laws, passed, 105; Ken- tucky's opposition to, 105, 108; repealed, 109.
Allen, Alfred, Conservative nominee for treasurer, 206.
Allen, John, delegate to seventh convention, 77; counsel for Burr, III; candidate for governor, 114; commands militia, 117; killed at Frenchtown, 119, 120; county named after, 120.
Amendments, Thirteenth ratified, 203; Four- teenth and Fifteenth ratified, 209.
American Colonization Society, 152.
American commerce interfered with, 116. American, or Know-Nothing party, 157, 158.
Anderson, Major Robert, commander at Fort Sumter, 166; commander of Kentucky Fed- erals, 176; issues proclamation of protec- tion, 178.
Anderson, Richard C., member of Anti-Relief party, 129.
Andrews, Judge, L. W., member of Opposi- tion party, 159.
Annexation of Texas, Clay's opposition to, 144; its effect, 156.
KENT. HIST. - 18 273
Anti-Federalists, 99, 100.
Anti-Relief party, organized, 129; becomes Old Court party, 134.
Antislavery, see Abolition movement.
Appellate courts, judges for, 215.
Appomattox Courthouse, Lee's surrender at, 203.
Army of Northern Virginia, surrender of, 203.
Arnold, Captain John, in War of 1812, 118.
Artistic productions in Kentucky, 137.
Athens of the West, Lexington's nickname, 55.
Atlantic States impoverished by Revolution, 51.
Baker, R. T., Republican nominee for lieu- tenant governor, 206.
Ballard, Bland, United States district judge, 179, 180.
Bank charters, granted, 128; repealed, 129. Bank of Kentucky, chartered, 113, 128; estab- lished, 143.
Bank of Louisville, established, 143.
Bank of the Commonwealth, chartered, 129, I30; its currency destroyed, 134.
Banks of the United States, established at Louisville and Kentucky, 134; Jackson vetoes bill of recharter, 143.
Baptists in Kentucky, 84.
Barbour, James, commissioner at Logan's fort, 37.
Barbour, Major Philip N., killed at Monterey, 146.
Barclay, Commodore, defeated by Perry, 122, 123.
Bardstown, one of Kentucky's earliest towns, 55, 84.
Barlow, Thomas Harris, constructs model railroad, 137.
Barlow's Planetarium, 137.
Barnes, S. M., Republican nominee for gov- ernor, 206.
Barry, Major William T., his oratorical influ- ence, 124, 125; favors Relief party, 129; elected lieutenant governor, 129; elected
274
INDEX
chief justice, 132; candidate for governor, I35.
Bear Wallow, General Morgan's forces at, I88.
Beauregard, General, reënforces Johnston, 183.
Beck, James B., elected U. S. senator, 213; reelected, 213.
Beckham, J. C. W., lieutenant governor, 219; governor, 219, 220; Democratic candidate for U. S. senator, 221 ; elected Senator, 223. Bell, Joshua F., statesman, 159; delegate to Peace Conference, 165.
Benton, Mortimer M., nominee for judge, 201. Bibb, George M., chief justice, 113; member Relief party, 129.
Big Bone Lick, early exploration of, 15.
Big Creek Gap, Kentucky invaded at, 190.
Bill, of repeal of court of appeals, 132; Com- promise, 134, 135; Omnibus, 155, 156. Bi-partisan boards, 224.
Bird, Captain Henry, captures Ruddle's and Martin's stations, 39.
Bivouac of the Dead, by Theodore O'Hara, I48.
Blackburn, Dr. Luke Pryor, elected gov- ernor, 213.
Blackburn, Gideon, president of Center Col- lege, 210.
Blackburn, J. C. S., elected U. S. senator, 213; Democratic caucus nominee for U. S. senator, 217; elected U. S. senator, 218.
Blackburn, William B., Anti-Relief candi- date, 131.
Blennerhasset, Burr's accomplice, II0; his death in disgrace, 112.
Blue Licks, Boone's expedition to, 34, 35; battle of, 120.
Blythe, Dr., president of Transylvania Uni- versity, 118.
Board of War established, 87, 88.
Boiling Springs, delegates from, 21, 22.
Boone, Daniel, pioneer in Kentucky, 12; captured by Indians, 13; rescues survey- ors, 16; cuts roads through Kentucky, 19, 21; his influence in settling Kentucky, 19; his family settles in Kentucky, 23; his character, 24; captured by Indians, 34, 35 ; appointed lieutenant colonel, 40; at Blue Licks, 46, 47; his intercourse with Filson, 56.
Boone, Jemima, captured by Indians, 26, 27. Boone, Squire, joins Daniel in Kentucky, 13. Boonesborough, settled, 21; parliament at, 22; fort at, 22, 23; Indian attacks on, 30, 32, 35, 36, 42 ; school opened at, 38; one of oldest towns, 55.
Border States, attempt at compromise, 162, 163; proposed convention of, 163.
Boswell, Colonel, commander of volunteers, 12I.
Botanical gardens at Lexington, projected by Rafinesque, 137.
Bourbon County, one of original nine coun- ties, 84.
Bowling Green, headquarters of western Con- federate army, 177; seat of Confederate government, 180; evacuated by Confed- erates, 182.
Bowman, John, member of first Harrodsburg court, 29, 30; colonel of Kentucky County, 30.
Boyd, Linn, death of, 189.
Boyle, General Jeremiah T., military com- mandant, 187, 188; his resignation, 198.
Boyle, John, chief justice, 130.
Bradford, John and Fielding, issue Kentucke Gazette, 72.
Bradford, John, address of welcome to Gov- ernor Shelby, 94.
Bradley, W. O., Republican candidate for governor, 216; first Republican governor of Kentucky, 216-218; elected U. S. sena- tor, 22I.
Brag, Colonel Braxton, commands Chatta- nooga forces, 189; his march through Ken- tucky, 191 ; his retreat, 192, 193.
Bramlette, Thomas Elliott, elected governor, 196.
Breathitt, John, elected governor, 136.
Breckinridge, John, president of Lexington Democratic Club, 99; appointed attorney- general, 102; offers Kentucky Resolutions, 107; appointed speaker, 109.
Breckinridge, John C., oration over Ken- tucky soldiers, 148; elected Vice President, 158; in favor of State convention, 163, 164; elected U. S. senator, 165; Confederate general, 179; superseded by Davis, 180.
Breckinridge, Mrs. Issa Desha, organizes Hart Memorial Association, 139, n. I.
Breckinridge, Robert, votes for Federal con stitution, 74; chosen speaker, 95.
Breckinridge, Rev. R. J., calms riot, 132, 133; president of Radical Union conven- tion, 201, 202.
Breckinridge, William L., president of Center College, 210.
British, claims in Kentucky, 32; stations in America, 59; intrigue in Kentucky, 82, 83 ; possessions surrendered, 100, IO1 ; soldiers captured in Canada, 1 24.
Brodhead, Daniel, opens store at Louisville, 54.
275
INDEX
Brown, James, appointed secretary of state, 95.
Brown, John, member from Kentucky, of Con- gress of Confederation of States, 73; letter to sixth convention, 75; member of Board of War, 87; elected U. S. senator, 96.
Brown, John Mason, author of Political Be- ginnings of Kentucky, 73, n. I.
Brown, John Young, elected governor, 216; candidate for governor, 218.
Brown, Rev. John H., address on Kentucky soldiers, 148.
Brown, Scott, adjutant general, 170, 179.
Bryan, William J., candidate for President, 217.
Bryan's Station attacked, 43-46.
Buchanan, James, elected President, 158.
Buckner, General Simon B., inspector of State Guards, 170; leader of State Guards, 177; Confederate commander, 182; gover- nor, 214, candidate for Vice President, 217. Buckner, Judge R. A., Sr. member of Anti- Relief party, 129; candidate for governor, 136.
Buckner, Judge R. A., member of Opposition party, 159; Unionist, 169.
Buell, General Don Carlos, commander of Kentucky forces, 181; commander of Fed- eral troops, 183; reenforces Grant, 184; in central Tennessee, 190; enters Louisville, 191; avoids Confederates, 192.
Buena Vista, battle of, 146. Bull Run, battle of, 174.
Bullitt, Alexander Scott, chosen speaker, 95; president of second convention, 108; elected lieutenant governor, 109.
Bullitt, Captain Thomas, surveyor in Ken- tucky, 15.
Bullock, Rice, votes for Federal constitution, 74.
Burbridge, General Steven G., commander of Kentucky forces, 198; his oppressive mili- tary rule, 199, 200; interferes with elec- tions, 201; deposed, 202.
. Burnam, Judge C. F., member of Opposition party, 159; member of Unionist party, 169; joins Republicans, 207.
Burnett, Henry C., U. S. representative in Congress of 1861, 170; delegate to Virginia, I80.
Burr, Aaron, his conspiracy, I10; indicted by Daveiss, III; festivities in his honor, 112; his trial and disgrace, 112.
Bush, Joseph H., artist, 138.
Butler, General Richard, killed at Wabash River, 89.
Butler, General William O., Democratic nom-
inee for governor, 144 ; his military exploits, 144; in Mexican War, 145; wounded at Monterey, 146; delegate to Peace Confer- ence, 165.
Cahokia, French village, 32.
Caldwell and McKee's army, 42, 43.
Caldwell, Colonel, commands regiment, 121. California applies for admission, 156.
Call, Richard Ellsworth, author of Life of C. S. Rafinesque, 137, n. I.
Callaway, Richard, member of first Harrods- burg court, 29, 30; his daughter captured by Indians, 26, 27.
Camden, Johnson M., Senator, 223.
Camp Boone, Confederate regiments at, I73.
Camp Clay, Federal regiments at, 173.
Camp Dick Robinson, Federal regiments at 174.
Camp Joe Holt, Federal regiments at, 173.
Camp Wild Cat, battle of, 180.
Canada, march of Harrison's army into, 124, 125.
Capitol, built in 1905-1909, 221.
Carlisle, John G., elected lieutenant gov- ernor, 210; secretary of treasury, against free silver, 216.
Catholics in Kentucky, 84.
Centenary of Kentucky, by Durrett, 29, n. I.
Centenary of Kentucky's admission, cele- brated, 215.
Center College chartered by Presbyterians, 2IO.
Cerro Gordo, attack on, 147.
Chamberlin, Jeremiah, president of Center College, 210.
Change of party names, 14I.
Characteristics of Kentuckians, 62.
Charters of banks, granted and repealed, 128. 129.
Chattanooga, Confederate forces organized at, I89.
Cherokees, claim Kentucky, 20; fear of their invasion, 60; treaty with English, 20.
Chillicothe, Indian settlement at, 35.
Christian church in Kentucky, 85.
Cincinnati, original town on site of, 56; pro- posed capture of, 190.
Circuit courts, increase in number of 215.
Citizenship, negroes obtain right of, 209.
Civil affairs in Kentucky, 141-150.
Civil conflicts in Kentucky, 196-204. Civil War, 151-204.
Clark, General George Rogers, expedition into Illinois country, 33, 34; attack on Indian
276
INDEX
towns, 40; reported attack on Shawnee Indians, 42, 43; commander in attack on Indians, 48; retires, 60; attack on Wabash Indians, 65; accepts commission as major general, 100.
Clark, James, declares Replevin Act uncon- stitutional, 130; elected governor, 14I.
Clark County citizens against Alien and Sedi- tion laws, 106, 107.
Clarksville, gathering against Indians at, 64. Clay, Brigadier General Green, commander of Kentucky volunteers, 121.
Clay, Cassius M., leader of antislavery movement, 154; abolition nominee for gov- ernor, 157.
Clay, Cassius M., Jr., candidate for Demo- cratic nomination for governor, 216.
Clay, Henry, opposes Alien and Sedition laws, 107; counsel for Aaron Burr, III; debate with Daveiss, 112 ; speech at George- town, 118; his temporary disfavor in Ken- tucky, 134, 135; his Compromise Bill or Omnibus Bill, 135, 155, 156; elected to U. S. Senate, 135; candidate for presidency, 136, 144; opposes annexation of Texas, 144; president of American Colonization So- ciety, 152; his resignation from Senate, 157. Clay, James B., delegate to Peace Conference, 165; arrest of, 178.
Clay, Lieutenant Colonel Henry, in Mexican War, 145; killed at Buena Vista, 146.
Cleveland, Grover, his policy against free silver, 216.
Coal production of Kentucky, 224.
College of Electors, 89.
Columbus, Confederates at, 175;' evacuated by Confederates, 182.
Commerce, interference with American, 116. Commissioners, elected by House of Repre- sentatives, 96.
Committee of sixty, confiscate The True American, 154, 155.
Compromise, Crittenden's attempt at, 162, 163; Border States attempt at, 162, 163; futility of efforts towards, 165.
Compromise or Omnibus Bill, Clay's, 134, 135, 155, 156.
Confederate Colonies' struggle for independ- ence, 50.
Confederate forces, in Kentucky, 173-175; resolutions against, 175, 176; Kentuckians join ranks of, 178; arrest of prominent citizens, 178; abandon Kentucky, 193; return to Kentucky, 205.
Confederate government of Kentucky, organ- ized, 174, 180, 181.
Confederate line of possession, 181.
Confederate States of America, government framed, 165; Kentucky desires admission to, 173.
Congress of Confederation of States, course in regard to Indian troubles, 60, 64.
Congress, proposes treaty with Spain, 70; hears Kentucky's petition for admission, 73; considers adoption of new Federal constitution, 73, 74; Kentucky's applica- tion referred to new, 75; Muter advises new appeal to, 77; Wilkinson's speech against, 78; delay in granting Kentucky its statehood, 82; passes Alien and Sedi- tion laws, 105; act of denounced by Clay, 107; special session called, 170; favors abolition, 186; adopts obnoxious military policy, 187; free wives of negro soldiers, 208.
Connolly, Dr. John, orders survey of Louis- ville, 15; British agent, 82, 83.
Conservative party, in temporary power, 134; called Conservative Union party, 159; opposed to laws against slavery, 167; controls elections of 1863, 196; welcomes the Confederates, 205; its downfall, 206.
Conservative Union conventions against Lin- coln, 202.
Conspiracies in Kentucky, First Spanish, 69- 81 ; British, 82, 83 ; French, 99, 100; Second Spanish, 101; Third Spanish, 105; Aaron Burr's, IIO.
Constitution, Federal, adopted, 74; Thirteenth Amendment adopted, 203; Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments adopted, 209.
Constitution of Kentucky, first, 89; second, 108; third, 150; fourth, 216, 217; text of, 227, 272.
Constitutional convention, at Danville, 89; of 1890, 214.
Continental Congress, 29.
Convention for independence, first, 61; sec- ond, 62; third, 62; fourth, 62, 65; fifth, 73; sixth, 75, 76; seventh, delegates to, 76; seventh, meeting of, 77, 78; eighth, 83; ninth, 83; tenth, 83, 89.
Convention for considering secession, pro- posed, 163, 164.
Convention, for revising State constitution called, 105; from the seceded States, at Montgomery, 165; constitutional, in 1890, 214
Coomes, Mrs. William, opens school at Har- rodsburg, 38.
Cornstalk, chief of Shawnee Indians, 16-18.
Cornwallis' surrender, 50.
Corporations, legal provisions for, 215.
Council of war in 1812, 123.
277
INDEX
Country party, in struggle for independence, 63; at time of Spanish conspiracy, 76; at Fayette election, 77; claims in seventh convention, 78.
County of Kentucky, established, 29-39; population in 1777, 32; division of the county, 40-49.
County Unit Extension Bill, 222.
Court of appeals, 96; decision as to Replevin Act, 130; judges attempt to remove, 131,. 132; newly organized, 132; abolished, 134. Court party, in struggle for independence, 63 ; at time of Spanish conspiracy, 76; at Fay- ette election, 77; claims in seventh conven- tion, 78; further efforts after separation, 79.
Cowan, John, intercourse with Filson, 56. Cowpens, battle of, 91.
Cox, Colonel, 121.
Cox, W. H., lieutenant governor, 221.
Caddock, J. J., nominee for register, 206.
Craig, John, trustee of Transylvania Univer- sity, 57.
Craig, Rev. Lewis, preaches in Kentucky, 84.
Criminal code revised, 105.
Crisis in Kentucky history, 80.
Crittenden, General George B., defeated at Mill Springs, 181.
Crittenden, Major General Thomas L., ap- pointed commander of militia, 176; reën- forces Federals, 192.
Crittenden, Major John J., his oratorical influence, 124, 125; member Anti-Relief party, 129; elected governor, 149; his career, 149; leader of Whig party, 157; type of Conservative Unionists, 159; offers compromise propositions, 162; address on Union standpoint, 165; leaves Senate, 165; speech for neutrality, 166; Union delegate to Congress, 170; his influence in holding Kentucky loyal, 170, 171 ; opposed to aboli- tion, 186.
¿Crockett, Colonel Joseph, delegate to seventh convention, 77; obtains signatures against illegal separation, 79.
Crow's Station (Danville), courthouse built near, 52, 53; meeting of University trus- tees at, 57.
Cumberland Gap, Confederate forces near, 175.
Currency, its development in early days, 128.
Currency question, an issue in Kentucky, 216 ; Democrats divided on account of free silver question, 217.
Cynthiana, conflict at, 189.
Daniel, Walker, attorney-general of Ken- tucky District, 52; trustee of Transylvania University, 57; killed by Indians, 52.
Danville, founding of, 53; one of Kentucky's oldest towns, 55; meeting of military offi- cers at, 60, 61 ; meeting of separation con- ventions at, 61-63 ; navigation question dis- cussed at, 71 ; political club founded at, 74; sixth convention at, 75; tenth convention at, 89.
"Dark and Bloody Ground," Kentucky's nickname, II.
Daveiss, Joseph Hamilton, indicts Aaron Burr, III; debate with Henry Clay, 112; death at Tippecanoe, 115; county named after, 115.
Davidge, Rezin H., associate justice, 132.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.