- James Greene Hardy
. [http://kentucky.gov/kyhs/hmdb/MarkerSearch.aspx?mode=County&county=50] Prior to being elected Lt. Governor of Kentucky, he was a prominent surveyor and teacher for many years.
Hardy was a very popular state-level non-confrontational politician, and he was strongly supportive of the policies of the
Know-Nothing Party in the years just before the Civil War. When asked his position onslavery , he would reply in vague terms that it was certainly a serious matter that he would give careful and measured thought to if elected. Hardyville, KY in Hart County was named in honor of him, to commemorate a series of popular stump speeches that he gave in the area while campaigning for political office. [http://kentucky.gov/kyhs/hmdb/MarkerSearch.aspx?mode=County&county=50] The land for Rock Springs Baptist Church, near the Hart and Barren County line, and near the Hardy homeplace and Hardy School, was also donated by the Hardy family and by Hardy.Charles S. Morehead and James G. Hardy ran for Governor and Lt. Governor, respectively, in 1854 on theKnow-Nothing Party ticket in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. They both won election, and Gov. Morehead served from 1855 until 1859, completing his term. Hardy, though, died before completing his term on July 16, 1856, serving only from 1855 to 1856, and his body was sent by rail to Glasgow, KY. A large funeral procession went out from Glasgow, and he was buried on his farm estate in an above-ground mausoleum near Rock Springs Baptist Church, amidst a crowd of several hundred local citizens who accompanied the final procession to pay their respects. An historical marker honoring Lt. Governor James G. Hardy is located today on the west side of US 31-W roughly 13 miles north ofGlasgow, KY , near Rock Springs Baptist Church and the Hardy homeplace/cemetery.Hardy was born in
Lunenburg County, Virginia . A descendant of the famous Hardy Plantation family of Virginia associated with the Hardy Mill, Hardy was the son of Isham Peter Hardy and Mary 'Polly' Snead, who had married in Lunenberg County onAugust 14 ,1792 . Hardy's family migrated from Lunenberg County to what becameHart County, Kentucky , and the family rapidly became heavily involved in local politics, with various family members serving in various local capacities instrumental for establishing basic Governmental services inMunfordville, Kentucky , and in what became Hart County, especially circa 1815-1818.Hardy himself, however, moved to near Glasgow,
Barren County, Kentucky , to make his own professional future and, later, to begin his political future. It was from Glasgow that he first won and held political office.Hardy was married three times. He married his first wife, Elizabeth Edwards, on January 25, 1814 in Barren County, KY. To this marriage were born 10 children (Henrietta, Rebecca Elizabeth, Elizabeth Joan, James Lawrence, Polly Lula, Hester Ann, Samuel Henry, Lucetta Perrin, Mary Sue, and Newton J.). He married his second wife, Elizabeth Jane Jennings, on October 10, 1833 in Barren County, KY. To this marriage were born 2 additional children (Thomas Joel and Martha A. "Mattie".) Hardy was married for the third and final time to Minerva K. Guffey on October 27, 1848 in
Barren County, KY , and no children were born to this marriage.Although Hardy's family had owned many slaves in Virginia, the Kentucky branch of the Hardy family had not brought any slaves from Virginia with them in their migration from Virginia to Kentucky. It is believed by many within the family that the reason for the move from Virginia itself was largely caused over differences in beliefs regarding slavery. Hence, it is largely believed by his descendants that had James G. Hardy lived, he would likely have joined the nascent Republicans by 1860 at the latest.
The next Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky,
Linn Boyd , also failed to live long enough to serve out his entire term of office.
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