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Charles S. Morehead

Charles Slaughter Morehead (July 7, 1802 – December 21, 1868) was a U.S. Representative from Kentucky, and served as the 20th Governor of Kentucky. Though a member of the Whig Party for most of his political service, he joined the Know Nothing, or American, Party in 1855, and was the only governor of Kentucky ever elected from that party.

Charles S. Morehead
20th Governor of Kentucky
In office
September 4, 1855 – August 30, 1859
LieutenantJames G. Hardy
Preceded byLazarus W. Powell
Succeeded byBeriah Magoffin
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky's 8th district
In office
March 4, 1847 – March 3, 1851
Preceded byGarrett Davis
Succeeded byJohn C. Breckinridge
Attorney General of Kentucky
In office
1832–1838
GovernorJohn Breathitt
James T. Morehead
James Clark
Preceded byJames W. Denny
Succeeded byOwen G. Cotes
Member of the Kentucky House of Representatives
In office
1828–1832
Personal details
Born
Charles Slaughter Morehead

(1802-07-07)July 7, 1802
Nelson County, Kentucky
DiedDecember 21, 1868(1868-12-21) (aged 66)
Greenville, Mississippi
Resting placeFrankfort Cemetery
Political partyWhig
Know Nothing
RelationsCousin of James Turner Morehead
Alma materTransylvania University
OccupationFarmer
ProfessionLawyer

Morehead's political service began in the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1828. In 1832, he was appointed state attorney general. He served in this capacity for five years, and later returned to the Kentucky House, where he was chosen Speaker of the House three times. He was elected to Congress in 1848 and served two terms. After his congressional tenure, he joined the Know Nothing Party and was chosen as the party's candidate for governor in 1855. The campaign was marred by anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic rhetoric that touched off the "Bloody Monday" riots in Louisville.

Morehead was a delegate to the Peace Conference of 1861 and the Border States Convention that attempted to stave off the Civil War. Although he favored Kentucky's neutrality, Morehead sympathized with the South and was an open critic of the Lincoln administration. He was imprisoned for disloyalty in September 1861, although no formal charges were ever brought against him. He was released from prison in January 1862, and afterward fled to Canada, Europe, and Mexico. After the war, he returned to the United States and settled on his plantation in Greenville, Mississippi, where he died on December 21, 1868.

Early life edit

Charles Slaughter Morehead was born near Bardstown, Nelson County, Kentucky, on July 7, 1802.[1] He was the son of Charles and Margaret (Slaughter) Morehead and a first cousin to Kentucky's twelfth governor, James Turner Morehead.[2] His father served in both houses of the Kentucky General Assembly.[2]

Morehead was educated in the area's public schools, then matriculated to Transylvania University.[1] He earned a bachelor's degree in 1820, graduating with honors.[3][4] After graduation, he became a tutor at the university and earned a Bachelor of Laws degree in 1822.[2] He relocated to Christian County, Kentucky, was admitted to the bar, and commenced practice in Hopkinsville.[1][3] He also worked as a farmer, and owned plantations in Mississippi and Louisiana.[1]

Morehead married Amanda Leavy on July 10, 1823.[5] She died July 5, 1829, at the age of twenty-five.[2] Following her death, Morehead married Margaret Leavy, his first wife's sister, on September 6, 1831.[5] Together they had four children.[5] Charles and Margaret were very fond of music, theater, dances, and parties.[6]

Political career edit

Morehead was elected as a Whig to the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1828 and was re-elected in 1829.[1][5] Following his second term in the legislature, he moved to Frankfort, Kentucky, believing it provided better opportunities for his legal practice.[7] He was appointed as state attorney general in 1832 and served for five years.[8] In 1834, he co-authored A Digest of the Statute Laws of Kentucky with Mason Brown.[5] He represented Franklin County in the state house from 1838 to 1842 and again in 1844; he was chosen Speaker of the House in 1840, 1841, and 1844.[9]

Morehead was elected the Thirtieth and Thirty-first Congresses, serving from March 4, 1847, until March 3, 1851.[1] During the Thirty-first Congress, the Whig caucus considered him as a candidate for Speaker of the House.[10] The voting for speaker began December 3, 1849.[11] The caucus first chose Robert C. Winthrop as their candidate, but after several ballots, Winthrop was still unable to obtain a majority because of sectional rivalries within the caucus.[11] Some Whigs from northern states voted for David Wilmot, a Free Soiler, while five southern Whigs steadfastly voted for Meredith Gentry.[11] The Democrats were similarly unable to muster a majority for their candidate, Howell Cobb.[11]

At their caucus meeting on the night of December 10, the Whigs agreed to continue voting for Winthrop for one more day, and if he was not elected, to switch their support to Morehead, who they believed could hold all of Winthrop's votes and win the votes of the southern Whigs as well as some southern Democrats. They made their intentions known on December 11, and by the end of the day, Morehead reported that he had received commitments of support from twenty southern Democrats. During the day's voting, the five southern Whigs shifted their support from Gentry to Morehead. This shift cost Morehead the support of many northern Whigs who, at the caucus meeting the night of December 11, declared that Morehead's election "would ruin the Whig party in the North",[10] especially if he gained the support of southern Democrats. Rather than further fracture the caucus, Morehead withdrew his name from consideration. Cobb was finally elected on the sixty-third ballot on December 22.[12]

Governor of Kentucky edit

Following his congressional tenure, Morehead resumed his law practice and management of his plantations.[1] In 1852, he was a presidential elector for Winfield Scott, and in 1853, he served another term in the Kentucky House.[2] By early 1855, sectional divisions had ripped apart the national Whig Party.[13] In Kentucky, many former Whigs associated with the Know Nothing Party.[13] Morehead was among these; he claimed that the Know Nothing Party was more "Union" than the Democratic Party.[6] The ex-Whigs hoped to take over the Know Nothing Party and reshape it into a Unionist Whig organization.[13] Accordingly, when the Know Nothing candidate for governor, Judge William Loving, withdrew from the race due to failing health, the influx of ex-Whigs nominated Morehead to replace him for the gubernatorial election of 1855.[13] Prior to the dissolution of the party, most had expected the Whigs would nominate Morehead at their own party's convention in April.[13]

Though Kentucky had only a small population of immigrants and Catholics, much of Morehead's campaign oratory was directed against these groups.[6] Most of the state's immigrant and Catholic population resided in Louisville, and tensions there reached a climax with an anti-foreign riot known as "Bloody Monday" on August 6, 1855.[2] Morehead won the election with 69,816 votes to 65,413 votes for Democrat Beverly L. Clarke.[5] In his inaugural address, Morehead denounced the nullification of the Fugitive Slave Act and despite his campaign rhetoric, proclaimed "perfect equality" for naturalized citizens.[14]

Morehead's term as governor was an active one. He approved the appropriation of funding for the first Kentucky State Fair, which was seen as a vehicle for encouraging improvements in agriculture.[5] He also approved the formation of the Kentucky State Agricultural Society in 1856.[5] The state geological survey begun under Governor Lazarus W. Powell was completed and published.[5] Internal improvements progressed as well; railroad mileage in the state increased from 242 miles to 568 miles during Morehead's term.[14]

Kentucky's school system was expanding rapidly, creating a shortage of qualified teachers in the state; Morehead responded to this need by proposing a bill for state-supported teacher education program at Transylvania University. The state's superintendent, John D. Matthews, lobbied for the bill, claiming that a failure to educate teachers in Kentucky would result in Northern teachers infiltrating the state and corrupting children's minds. The bill passed in 1856, and Transylvania University made the transition from a private institution to a state-supported university. Money raised through school taxes, previously regarded as revenue by the legislature, was diverted to support of Transylvania. Although the teacher education program enrolled seventy-five students, opposition to the plan developed soon after its passage. Many citizens felt that public school money should not be used to support higher education. Governor Morehead defended the plan, but when the legislature convened two years later, it revoked the university's funding.[14]

The number of prisoners housed in the state penitentiary at Frankfort was also increasing. By 1856, 237 prisoners were detained in the facility which had only 126 cells. Though state law required solitary confinement at night, the statute was impossible to administer due to the space constraints. Morehead cooperated with the legislature and developed a plan to expand the penitentiary to 252 cells. He also renegotiated the state's contract with the warden that was more favorable to the state, and allowed the warden to collect income from convict labor.[15]

Early in his term, Morehead approved two new bank charters, but he later vetoed several others, beginning with the proposed Bank of Harrodsburg.[14] Many other proposed bank charters died in the General Assembly.[14] The later years of Morehead's administration were hindered by the financial Panic of 1857.[5] In December 1857, he reported state expenditures of $21,000 for relief of the poor.[14]

Civil War and later life edit

Morehead moved to Louisville in 1859 and formed a law partnership with his nephew, Charles M. Briggs.[8] In February 1861, he attended the Peace Conference of 1861 that tried to resolve the sectional differences between the states.[5] In May 1861, he was chosen as a delegate to the Border State Convention, an ultimately futile attempt to avert the Civil War.[2] Morehead refused to sign the final document produced by the convention because he did not agree with all the statements it contained.[2] He was an advocate of Kentucky's position of neutrality, but was personally sympathetic to the South and was an outspoken critic of the Lincoln administration.[5] He condemned Secretary of State William H. Seward for cutting off trade with the South.[2]

On September 19, 1861, Morehead, Louisville Courier editor Reuben T. Durrett, and a man named Martin W. Barr were arrested for disloyalty.[16] The three were taken to Indianapolis, Indiana, and the next day, Louisville circuit court judge John Catron issued a writ of habeas corpus for Morehead.[16] On September 24, the officer who had arrested Morehead told Catron that Secretary of War Simon Cameron had already ordered Morehead taken to Fort Lafayette in New York Harbor.[17] Shortly after this, a grand jury was convened but failed to return any charges against Morehead.[17]

Morehead was later transferred to Fort Warren in Boston Harbor.[2] He complained to his captors about the conditions in the prison; specifically, the difficulty of writing letters when confined with nine other men in a room that measured just ten feet by twenty feet.[18] Petitions for Morehead's release were delivered to President Lincoln, but Lincoln told Secretary of State Seward that Morehead and those arrested with them would be released "when James Guthrie and James Speed [friends of Lincoln's in Kentucky] think they should be".[17] Later, Guthrie told Lincoln that Morehead's arrest had "not been beneficial" to their cause in Kentucky.[17] Morehead was paroled on January 6, 1862, on the condition that he swear an oath not to take part in the Confederate insurgence.[2][17] On March 19, 1862, he was unconditionally discharged from his parole.[2]

Morehead returned to his home in Louisville, but feared his refusal to take an oath of allegiance to the Constitution would lead to another arrest.[2] In June 1862, he fled to Canada, then to Europe, and finally to Mexico.[2] Following the war, Morehead returned to the United States and lived on his plantation in Greenville, Mississippi.[1] He died there on December 21, 1868, and was buried on the grounds.[1] On May 31, 1879, he was reburied in the Frankfort Cemetery in Frankfort, Kentucky.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Charles S. Morehead"
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Powell, p. 50
  3. ^ a b Perrin, p. 89
  4. ^ Kentucky Governor Charles Slaughter Morehead
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Harrison, p. 648
  6. ^ a b c Ramage, p. 75.
  7. ^ Perrin, pp. 89–90
  8. ^ a b Perrin, p. 90
  9. ^ Levin, p. 119
  10. ^ a b Holt, p. 471
  11. ^ a b c d Holt, p. 470
  12. ^ Holt, pp. 471–472
  13. ^ a b c d e Holt, p.936
  14. ^ a b c d e f Ramage, p. 76
  15. ^ Ramage, p. 77
  16. ^ a b Silver, p. 171
  17. ^ a b c d e Silver, p. 172
  18. ^ Hesseltine, p. 40

Bibliography edit

  • United States Congress. "Charles S. Morehead (id: M000936)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved on 2009-04-01
  • Harrison, Lowell H. (1992). Kleber, John E. (ed.). The Kentucky Encyclopedia. Associate editors: Thomas D. Clark, Lowell H. Harrison, and James C. Klotter. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1772-0.
  • Hesseltine, William Best (1972). Civil War Prisons. Kent State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87338-129-1.
  • Holt, Michael F. (2003). The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War. Oxford University Press, US. ISBN 0-19-516104-1. Retrieved February 25, 2009.
  • Levin, H. (1897). Lawyers and Lawmakers of Kentucky. Lewis Publishing Company. Retrieved February 23, 2009.
  • "Kentucky Governor Charles Slaughter Morehead". National Governors Association. Retrieved April 4, 2012.
  • Perrin, William Henry (1884). . F.A. Battey Publishing Company. Archived from the original on March 8, 2005. Retrieved February 23, 2009.
  • Powell, Robert A. (1976). Kentucky Governors. Frankfort, Kentucky: Kentucky Images. OCLC 2690774.
  • Ramage, James A. (2004). Lowell H. Harrison (ed.). Kentucky's Governors. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2326-7.
  • Silver, David M. (1998). Lincoln's Supreme Court. University Press of Illinois. ISBN 0-252-06719-3. Retrieved February 25, 2009.

Further reading edit

  • Morehead, Charles Slaughter; Mason Brown (1834). A Digest of the Statute Laws of Kentucky, of a Public and Permanent Nature: From the Commencement of the Government to the Session of the Legislature, Ending on the 24th February, 1834 : with References to Judicial Decisions. A. G. Hodges. Retrieved February 23, 2009.
Party political offices
First Know Nothing nominee for Governor of Kentucky
1855
Succeeded by
None
Legal offices
Preceded by Attorney General of Kentucky
1832–1838
Succeeded by
Owen G. Cotes
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky's 8th congressional district

1847 – 1851
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Kentucky
1855–1859
Succeeded by

charles, morehead, expert, tropical, diseases, founder, grant, medical, college, charles, morehead, physician, charles, slaughter, morehead, july, 1802, december, 1868, representative, from, kentucky, served, 20th, governor, kentucky, though, member, whig, par. For the expert in tropical diseases and co founder of the Grant Medical College see Charles Morehead physician Charles Slaughter Morehead July 7 1802 December 21 1868 was a U S Representative from Kentucky and served as the 20th Governor of Kentucky Though a member of the Whig Party for most of his political service he joined the Know Nothing or American Party in 1855 and was the only governor of Kentucky ever elected from that party Charles S Morehead20th Governor of KentuckyIn office September 4 1855 August 30 1859LieutenantJames G HardyPreceded byLazarus W PowellSucceeded byBeriah MagoffinMember of the U S House of Representatives from Kentucky s 8th districtIn office March 4 1847 March 3 1851Preceded byGarrett DavisSucceeded byJohn C BreckinridgeAttorney General of KentuckyIn office 1832 1838GovernorJohn BreathittJames T MoreheadJames ClarkPreceded byJames W DennySucceeded byOwen G CotesMember of the Kentucky House of RepresentativesIn office 1828 1832Personal detailsBornCharles Slaughter Morehead 1802 07 07 July 7 1802Nelson County KentuckyDiedDecember 21 1868 1868 12 21 aged 66 Greenville MississippiResting placeFrankfort CemeteryPolitical partyWhigKnow NothingRelationsCousin of James Turner MoreheadAlma materTransylvania UniversityOccupationFarmerProfessionLawyerMorehead s political service began in the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1828 In 1832 he was appointed state attorney general He served in this capacity for five years and later returned to the Kentucky House where he was chosen Speaker of the House three times He was elected to Congress in 1848 and served two terms After his congressional tenure he joined the Know Nothing Party and was chosen as the party s candidate for governor in 1855 The campaign was marred by anti immigrant and anti Catholic rhetoric that touched off the Bloody Monday riots in Louisville Morehead was a delegate to the Peace Conference of 1861 and the Border States Convention that attempted to stave off the Civil War Although he favored Kentucky s neutrality Morehead sympathized with the South and was an open critic of the Lincoln administration He was imprisoned for disloyalty in September 1861 although no formal charges were ever brought against him He was released from prison in January 1862 and afterward fled to Canada Europe and Mexico After the war he returned to the United States and settled on his plantation in Greenville Mississippi where he died on December 21 1868 Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 2 1 Governor of Kentucky 3 Civil War and later life 4 References 4 1 Bibliography 5 Further readingEarly life editCharles Slaughter Morehead was born near Bardstown Nelson County Kentucky on July 7 1802 1 He was the son of Charles and Margaret Slaughter Morehead and a first cousin to Kentucky s twelfth governor James Turner Morehead 2 His father served in both houses of the Kentucky General Assembly 2 Morehead was educated in the area s public schools then matriculated to Transylvania University 1 He earned a bachelor s degree in 1820 graduating with honors 3 4 After graduation he became a tutor at the university and earned a Bachelor of Laws degree in 1822 2 He relocated to Christian County Kentucky was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Hopkinsville 1 3 He also worked as a farmer and owned plantations in Mississippi and Louisiana 1 Morehead married Amanda Leavy on July 10 1823 5 She died July 5 1829 at the age of twenty five 2 Following her death Morehead married Margaret Leavy his first wife s sister on September 6 1831 5 Together they had four children 5 Charles and Margaret were very fond of music theater dances and parties 6 Political career editMorehead was elected as a Whig to the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1828 and was re elected in 1829 1 5 Following his second term in the legislature he moved to Frankfort Kentucky believing it provided better opportunities for his legal practice 7 He was appointed as state attorney general in 1832 and served for five years 8 In 1834 he co authored A Digest of the Statute Laws of Kentucky with Mason Brown 5 He represented Franklin County in the state house from 1838 to 1842 and again in 1844 he was chosen Speaker of the House in 1840 1841 and 1844 9 Morehead was elected the Thirtieth and Thirty first Congresses serving from March 4 1847 until March 3 1851 1 During the Thirty first Congress the Whig caucus considered him as a candidate for Speaker of the House 10 The voting for speaker began December 3 1849 11 The caucus first chose Robert C Winthrop as their candidate but after several ballots Winthrop was still unable to obtain a majority because of sectional rivalries within the caucus 11 Some Whigs from northern states voted for David Wilmot a Free Soiler while five southern Whigs steadfastly voted for Meredith Gentry 11 The Democrats were similarly unable to muster a majority for their candidate Howell Cobb 11 At their caucus meeting on the night of December 10 the Whigs agreed to continue voting for Winthrop for one more day and if he was not elected to switch their support to Morehead who they believed could hold all of Winthrop s votes and win the votes of the southern Whigs as well as some southern Democrats They made their intentions known on December 11 and by the end of the day Morehead reported that he had received commitments of support from twenty southern Democrats During the day s voting the five southern Whigs shifted their support from Gentry to Morehead This shift cost Morehead the support of many northern Whigs who at the caucus meeting the night of December 11 declared that Morehead s election would ruin the Whig party in the North 10 especially if he gained the support of southern Democrats Rather than further fracture the caucus Morehead withdrew his name from consideration Cobb was finally elected on the sixty third ballot on December 22 12 Governor of Kentucky edit Following his congressional tenure Morehead resumed his law practice and management of his plantations 1 In 1852 he was a presidential elector for Winfield Scott and in 1853 he served another term in the Kentucky House 2 By early 1855 sectional divisions had ripped apart the national Whig Party 13 In Kentucky many former Whigs associated with the Know Nothing Party 13 Morehead was among these he claimed that the Know Nothing Party was more Union than the Democratic Party 6 The ex Whigs hoped to take over the Know Nothing Party and reshape it into a Unionist Whig organization 13 Accordingly when the Know Nothing candidate for governor Judge William Loving withdrew from the race due to failing health the influx of ex Whigs nominated Morehead to replace him for the gubernatorial election of 1855 13 Prior to the dissolution of the party most had expected the Whigs would nominate Morehead at their own party s convention in April 13 Though Kentucky had only a small population of immigrants and Catholics much of Morehead s campaign oratory was directed against these groups 6 Most of the state s immigrant and Catholic population resided in Louisville and tensions there reached a climax with an anti foreign riot known as Bloody Monday on August 6 1855 2 Morehead won the election with 69 816 votes to 65 413 votes for Democrat Beverly L Clarke 5 In his inaugural address Morehead denounced the nullification of the Fugitive Slave Act and despite his campaign rhetoric proclaimed perfect equality for naturalized citizens 14 Morehead s term as governor was an active one He approved the appropriation of funding for the first Kentucky State Fair which was seen as a vehicle for encouraging improvements in agriculture 5 He also approved the formation of the Kentucky State Agricultural Society in 1856 5 The state geological survey begun under Governor Lazarus W Powell was completed and published 5 Internal improvements progressed as well railroad mileage in the state increased from 242 miles to 568 miles during Morehead s term 14 Kentucky s school system was expanding rapidly creating a shortage of qualified teachers in the state Morehead responded to this need by proposing a bill for state supported teacher education program at Transylvania University The state s superintendent John D Matthews lobbied for the bill claiming that a failure to educate teachers in Kentucky would result in Northern teachers infiltrating the state and corrupting children s minds The bill passed in 1856 and Transylvania University made the transition from a private institution to a state supported university Money raised through school taxes previously regarded as revenue by the legislature was diverted to support of Transylvania Although the teacher education program enrolled seventy five students opposition to the plan developed soon after its passage Many citizens felt that public school money should not be used to support higher education Governor Morehead defended the plan but when the legislature convened two years later it revoked the university s funding 14 The number of prisoners housed in the state penitentiary at Frankfort was also increasing By 1856 237 prisoners were detained in the facility which had only 126 cells Though state law required solitary confinement at night the statute was impossible to administer due to the space constraints Morehead cooperated with the legislature and developed a plan to expand the penitentiary to 252 cells He also renegotiated the state s contract with the warden that was more favorable to the state and allowed the warden to collect income from convict labor 15 Early in his term Morehead approved two new bank charters but he later vetoed several others beginning with the proposed Bank of Harrodsburg 14 Many other proposed bank charters died in the General Assembly 14 The later years of Morehead s administration were hindered by the financial Panic of 1857 5 In December 1857 he reported state expenditures of 21 000 for relief of the poor 14 Civil War and later life editMorehead moved to Louisville in 1859 and formed a law partnership with his nephew Charles M Briggs 8 In February 1861 he attended the Peace Conference of 1861 that tried to resolve the sectional differences between the states 5 In May 1861 he was chosen as a delegate to the Border State Convention an ultimately futile attempt to avert the Civil War 2 Morehead refused to sign the final document produced by the convention because he did not agree with all the statements it contained 2 He was an advocate of Kentucky s position of neutrality but was personally sympathetic to the South and was an outspoken critic of the Lincoln administration 5 He condemned Secretary of State William H Seward for cutting off trade with the South 2 On September 19 1861 Morehead Louisville Courier editor Reuben T Durrett and a man named Martin W Barr were arrested for disloyalty 16 The three were taken to Indianapolis Indiana and the next day Louisville circuit court judge John Catron issued a writ of habeas corpus for Morehead 16 On September 24 the officer who had arrested Morehead told Catron that Secretary of War Simon Cameron had already ordered Morehead taken to Fort Lafayette in New York Harbor 17 Shortly after this a grand jury was convened but failed to return any charges against Morehead 17 Morehead was later transferred to Fort Warren in Boston Harbor 2 He complained to his captors about the conditions in the prison specifically the difficulty of writing letters when confined with nine other men in a room that measured just ten feet by twenty feet 18 Petitions for Morehead s release were delivered to President Lincoln but Lincoln told Secretary of State Seward that Morehead and those arrested with them would be released when James Guthrie and James Speed friends of Lincoln s in Kentucky think they should be 17 Later Guthrie told Lincoln that Morehead s arrest had not been beneficial to their cause in Kentucky 17 Morehead was paroled on January 6 1862 on the condition that he swear an oath not to take part in the Confederate insurgence 2 17 On March 19 1862 he was unconditionally discharged from his parole 2 Morehead returned to his home in Louisville but feared his refusal to take an oath of allegiance to the Constitution would lead to another arrest 2 In June 1862 he fled to Canada then to Europe and finally to Mexico 2 Following the war Morehead returned to the United States and lived on his plantation in Greenville Mississippi 1 He died there on December 21 1868 and was buried on the grounds 1 On May 31 1879 he was reburied in the Frankfort Cemetery in Frankfort Kentucky 2 References edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp American Civil War portal a b c d e f g h i Charles S Morehead a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Powell p 50 a b Perrin p 89 Kentucky Governor Charles Slaughter Morehead a b c d e f g h i j k l Harrison p 648 a b c Ramage p 75 Perrin pp 89 90 a b Perrin p 90 Levin p 119 a b Holt p 471 a b c d Holt p 470 Holt pp 471 472 a b c d e Holt p 936 a b c d e f Ramage p 76 Ramage p 77 a b Silver p 171 a b c d e Silver p 172 Hesseltine p 40 Bibliography edit United States Congress Charles S Morehead id M000936 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved on 2009 04 01 Harrison Lowell H 1992 Kleber John E ed The Kentucky Encyclopedia Associate editors Thomas D Clark Lowell H Harrison and James C Klotter Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 1772 0 Hesseltine William Best 1972 Civil War Prisons Kent State University Press ISBN 978 0 87338 129 1 Holt Michael F 2003 The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 516104 1 Retrieved February 25 2009 Levin H 1897 Lawyers and Lawmakers of Kentucky Lewis Publishing Company Retrieved February 23 2009 Kentucky Governor Charles Slaughter Morehead National Governors Association Retrieved April 4 2012 Perrin William Henry 1884 Counties of Christian and Trigg Kentucky historical and biographical F A Battey Publishing Company Archived from the original on March 8 2005 Retrieved February 23 2009 Powell Robert A 1976 Kentucky Governors Frankfort Kentucky Kentucky Images OCLC 2690774 Ramage James A 2004 Lowell H Harrison ed Kentucky s Governors Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2326 7 Silver David M 1998 Lincoln s Supreme Court University Press of Illinois ISBN 0 252 06719 3 Retrieved February 25 2009 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles S Morehead Morehead Charles Slaughter Mason Brown 1834 A Digest of the Statute Laws of Kentucky of a Public and Permanent Nature From the Commencement of the Government to the Session of the Legislature Ending on the 24th February 1834 with References to Judicial Decisions A G Hodges Retrieved February 23 2009 Party political officesFirst Know Nothing nominee for Governor of Kentucky1855 Succeeded byNoneLegal officesPreceded byJames W Denny Attorney General of Kentucky1832 1838 Succeeded byOwen G CotesU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byGarrett Davis Member of the U S House of Representatives from Kentucky s 8th congressional district1847 1851 Succeeded byJohn C BreckinridgePolitical officesPreceded byLazarus W Powell Governor of Kentucky1855 1859 Succeeded byBeriah Magoffin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles S Morehead amp oldid 1211745823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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