John Crittenden
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John Jordan Crittenden (1787 - 1863)

John Jordan Crittenden
Born in Versailles, Woodford, Kentucky, USAmap
Ancestors ancestors
Husband of — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
Husband of — married 1811 in 1st wifemap
Husband of — married Feb 1853 [location unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died at age 75 in Frankfort, Franklin, Kentucky, USAmap
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Profile last modified | Created 21 Dec 2014
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Preceded by
14th Attorney General
Henry D. Gilpin

Preceded by
21st Attorney General
Reverdy Johnson




Preceded by
16th Governor

William Owsley


Preceded by
Martin D. Hardin

Preceded by
George M. Bibb




Preceded by
Henry Clay

Preceded by
Archibald Dixon
John J. Crittenden
15th Attorney General
of the United States

1841
22nd Attorney General
1850—1853

17th Governor
of Kentucky
Seal of the State of Kentucky
1848—1850

US Senator (Class 2)
from Kentucky
[1]
1817—1819
US Senator (Class 2)
from Kentucky

1835—1841
Seal of the US Senate
US Senator (Class 3)
from Kentucky

1842—1848
US Senator (Class 3)
from Kentucky

1855—1861

Succeeded by
16th Attorney General
Hugh S. Legaré

Succeeded by
23rd Attorney General
Caleb Cushing




Succeeded by
18th Governor

John L. Helm


Succeeded by
Richard Johnson

Succeeded by
James Morehead




Succeeded by
Thomas Metcalfe

Succeeded by
John Breckinridge

Biography

Notables Project
John Crittenden is Notable.

US Senator, Kentucky Governor, Presidential Cabinet Secretary. The most famous member of the Crittenden political dynasty, he was born near Versailles, Kentucky. He began his legal education as an apprentice to George M. Bibb, then went to Virginia for a degree in Law from William and Mary College. Admitted to the Kentucky bar in 1807, he began his political career when he accepted the position of Attorney General for the Illinois Territory. During the War of 1812, he worked as an aide to the Governor, then returned to Kentucky following the war. His congressional service began in the Kentucky House in 1811 where would serve again at later points in his career, during one term accepting the position of Speaker of the House. His United States Senate career began in 1817, and he would serve on and off for the next 44 years. Crittenden was also at one point a United States District Attorney (until he publicly disagreed with some of President Andrew Jackson's policies), and John Quincy Adams tried to have him appointed by a justice in the United States Supreme Court. In 1841, he was appointed to the Cabinet of William Henry Harrison as Attorney General of the United States. He was given that position again in 1850 by Millard Fillmore. In 1848, he was sworn in as Governor of Kentucky. Despite being pro-slavery, Crittenden remained loyal to the Union. In 1860, Crittenden was back in the Senate and was at the forefront of trying to affect a reconciliation between North and South. His first plan "The Crittenden Compromise" heavily supported slave states and was rejected by Lincoln and Senate Republicans. His next compromise, "The Crittenden-Johnson Resolution" was passed in 1861. It stated that the war was being fought to preserve the Union not to subjugate the South. During his life, Crittenden moved from one public position to another without much of a break in between a couple of those times being appointed to replace others. He died in Frankfort while campaigning yet again for re-election. He maintained his allegiance to the Union during the Civil War, and two of his sons elected to fight on opposing sides, with elder son George Bibb Crittenden serving as a Brigadier General in the Confederate Army, and younger son Thomas Leonidas Crittenden a Major General in the Union Army. (bio by: Catharine)

Legacy

  • Crittenden County, Kentucky is named in his honor.

Sources

  1. Resigned to return to private practice, vacant March 3, 1819 – December 10, 1819 when successor elected.




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