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Senate Years of Service: 1805-1806 Party: Democratic Republican/Jacksonian
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ADAIR, John, a Senator and a Representative from Kentucky; born in Chester
District, Chester County, S.C., January 9, 1757; attended the public schools in
Charlotte, N.C.; served in the Revolutionary War; member of the South Carolina
convention that ratified the Constitution of the United States; moved to
Kentucky in 1788; major of volunteers in an expedition against the Indians
under General Wilkinson in 1791 and 1792; was a lieutenant colonel under
General Scott in 1793; member of the Kentucky constitutional convention in
1792; member of the State house of representatives 1793-1795, 1798, and
1800-1803, serving as speaker in 1802 and 1803; register of the United States
land office in 1805; elected as a Democratic Republican to the United States
Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John Breckinridge and
served from November 8, 1805, to November 18, 1806, when he resigned, having
been an unsuccessful candidate for reelection; aide to Governor Isaac Shelby in
the Battle of the Thames in 1813; commander of the Kentucky rifle brigade which
served under General Andrew Jackson in 1814 and 1815; again a member of the
State house of representatives in 1817; appointed adjutant general with the
brevet rank of brigadier general; Governor of Kentucky 1820-1824; elected as a
Jacksonian to the Twenty-second Congress (March 4, 1831-March 3, 1833); was not
a candidate for reelection in 1832; died in Harrodsburg, Ky., May 19, 1840;
interment in State Cemetery, Frankfort, Ky., where a monument to his memory was
erected by the State.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography; Gillig, John
S. In the Pursuit of Truth and Honor: The Controversy Between Andrew Jackson
and John Adair in 1817.
Filson Club History Quarterly 58 (April 1984): 177-201; Leger,
William G. The Public Life Of John Adair. Ph.D. dissertation, University of
Kentucky, 1960.
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