- William Hall (governor)
William Hall (
February 11 ,1775 –October 7 ,1856 ) was the Governor of the state ofTennessee from April to October of 1829.Hall was a native of
North Carolina but came to Tennessee while still a young man and became a prosperousfarmer as well as a political leader. After serving in theCreek War , he was elected to theTennessee House of Representatives in 1797, serving there until 1805. He served as abrigadier general in theWar of 1812 . He was elected to the Tennessee State Senate in 1821, where he was later to serve as speaker.As senate speaker Hall succeeded to the office of
governor under the Tennesseestate constitution whenSam Houston resigned the post. He did not stand for election as governor in his own right. He was the first governor of Tennessee ever to serve out the unexpired portion of a term to which another person had been elected, and served for a shorter period of time as governor of Tennessee than anyone else to serve in that position (if one discounts the supposed month-long governorship of E. H. East in early 1865, as the official "Tennessee Blue Book " does). An ally ofAndrew Jackson , Hall later served in the U.S. House of Representatives for one term (1831–1833) (Twenty-second Congress) and then retired from public life, dying over two decades later on his farm "Locust Land" in Sumner County and being buried in the family cemetery there.
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