Richard Hawes, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Richard Hawes

United States Representative; Second Confederate governor of Kentucky

Date of Birth: 06-Feb-1797

Place of Birth: Bowling Green, Virginia, United States

Date of Death: 25-May-1877

Profession: judge, lawyer, politician

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Aquarius


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About Richard Hawes

  • Richard Hawes Jr.
  • (February 6, 1797 – May 25, 1877) was a United States Representative from Kentucky and the second Confederate Governor of Kentucky.
  • He was part of the politically influential Hawes family.
  • His brother, uncle, and cousin also served as U.S.
  • Representatives, and his grandson Harry B.
  • Hawes was a member of the United States Senate. Hawes began his political career as an ardent Whig and was a close friend of the party's founder, Henry Clay.
  • When the party declined and dissolved in the 1850s, Hawes became a Democrat, and his relationship with Clay cooled. At the outbreak of the Civil War, Hawes was a supporter of Kentucky's doctrine of armed neutrality.
  • When the Commonwealth's neutrality was breached in September 1861, Hawes fled to Virginia and enlisted as a brigade commissary under Confederate general Humphrey Marshall.
  • When Kentucky's Confederate government was formed in Russellville, Hawes was offered the position of state auditor, but declined.
  • Months later, he was selected to be Confederate governor of the Commonwealth following George W.
  • Johnson's death at the Battle of Shiloh. Hawes and the Confederate government traveled with Braxton Bragg's Army of Tennessee, and when Bragg invaded Kentucky in October 1862, he captured Frankfort and held an inauguration ceremony for Hawes.
  • The ceremony was interrupted, however, by forces under Union general Don Carlos Buell, and the Confederates were driven from the Commonwealth following the Battle of Perryville.
  • Hawes relocated to Virginia, where he conducted a Confederate government in exile for Kentucky and continued to lobby President Jefferson Davis to attempt another invasion of the state. At the end of the war, the Confederate government of Kentucky in exile ceased to exist, and Hawes returned to his home in Paris, Kentucky.
  • He swore an oath of allegiance to the Union, and was allowed to return to his law practice.
  • He was elected county judge of Bourbon County, a post he held until his death in 1877.

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