- William L. Sharkey
William Lewis Sharkey (
July 12 ,1798 ndashApril 29 ,1873 ) was an Americanjudge andpolitician fromMississippi .He was born in
Sumner County, Tennessee , where he and his family lived until they moved toWarren County, Mississippi , when he was six years of age. In 1822, he was accepted into the bar at Natchez. Three years later he moved to Vicksburg and after a few years was elected for a single term to the state House of Representatives (1828-1829). He served briefly in 1832 as acircuit court judge before being elected ajustice to the state supreme court later that year where he remained for 18 years until his resignation. Sharkey was appointed to the office of Secretary of War byU.S. President Millard Fillmore in 1851, but declined.He was a member of the Whig Party and was strongly opposed to the
secession of Mississippi in 1861. Throughout theAmerican Civil War he remained a staunch Unionist and, according to one source, was "tolerated by his Confederate neighbors only because of his towering reputation as ajurist ." Governor Charles Clark appointed him in 1865 as a commissioner (along with William Yeager) to confer on behalf of the state with PresidentAndrew Johnson . In that year, Johnson appointed Sharkey to be provisional governor, leaving office with the election ofBenjamin G. Humphreys in October. He was elected Senator in 1865 but was denied his seat by theUnited States Congress . Sharkey died inWashington, D.C. in 1873. He is buried in Greenwood Cemetery inJackson, Mississippi .Sharkey County, Mississippi is named after him.External links
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succession box
before=Charles Clark
title=Governor ofMississippi
after=Benjamin G. Humphreys
years=1865
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