- William Cocke
William Cocke (
September 6 ,1747 –August 22 ,1828 ) was an American lawyer, pioneer, and statesman. He has the distinction of having served in the state legislature of four different states:Virginia ,North Carolina ,Tennessee , andMississippi , and was one of the first two United States senators for Tennessee.William was born in
Amelia County, Virginia in 1747. He was the sixth of ten or eleven children of Abraham (c.1695–1760) and Mary (Batte) Cocke. William was educated at home before reading law. He was admitted to the bar in Virginia and engaged in a limited law practice.Cocke spent more time on the frontier than he did in a law office. He was involved in exploration in the company of
Daniel Boone , seeing much of what was to become easternKentucky andEast Tennessee . He was elected a member of theVirginia House of Burgesses and acolonel ofmilitia ; in 1776, he led four companies of that militia into to what became Tennessee for action against the Indians. Later that year, he left Virginia and moved to what was to become Tennessee. During the attempted organization of theState of Franklin , Cocke was elected as the would-be state's delegate to theCongress of the Confederation .In 1796, Cocke was chosen as a delegate to the convention that wrote the first Tennessee
state constitution . The newly formed government then selected Cocke to be one of the new state's initial senators, along withWilliam Blount . Cocke and Blount then presented their credentials to the United States Senate onMay 9 ,1796 . The Senate refused to seat Cocke and Blount while they debated the admission of Tennessee into the Union. When Tennessee was finally admitted onJune 1 , the issue of Cocke and Blount's seating was again raised. The Federalist Senate held by a narrow margin (11–10) that Cocke and Blount's election was illegal because it had occurred without Congressional authorization. The Tennessee legislature duly reselected Cocke and Blount onAugust 2 . [cite book| last=Butler| first=Anne M.| coauthors=Wolff, Wendy| title=Senate Election, Explusion and Censure Cases from 1793 to 1990| year=1995| publisher=Government Printing Office| location=Washington, D.C.| pages=10–12| chapter=Case 4: William Blount and William Cocke]His initial term expired on
March 3 ,1797 . However, theTennessee General Assembly initially neglected to elect a Senate successor to Cocke; he was subsequently appointed to the post in his former seat bygovernor of Tennessee John Sevier onApril 22 ,1797 , until the General Assembly belatedly elected his successor,Andrew Jackson . Later, he was elected by the Tennessee Assembly to the other U.S. Senate seat, serving in it fromMarch 4 ,1799 toMarch 3 ,1805 .Cocke was appointed a
judge of the First Judicial Circuit of Tennessee in 1809. He later resigned this position and moved toMississippi . There, he was elected to the state legislature in 1813. He briefly returned to military duty, serving under Andrew Jackson in theCreek War . In 1814, he was appointed by PresidentJames Madison to beIndian agent to theChickasaw nation; he died inColumbus, Lowndes County, Mississippi , in 1828 and is buried there, in Friendship Cemetery.Cocke County, Tennessee is named in his honor. His sonJohn Alexander Cocke (1772–1854) was a four-term U.S. Representative from Tennessee; his grandson,William Michael Cocke (1815–1896), was a two-term U.S. Representative from Tennessee.Notes
External links
* [http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=C000572 Congressional Biography]
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=8004425 Find-A-Grave profile for William Cocke]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.