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Senate Years of Service: 1825-1829; 1829-1837 Party: Adams; Anti-Jackson
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| Indiana Historical Society |
HENDRICKS, William, (uncle of Thomas Andrews Hendricks),
a Representative and a Senator from Indiana; born in Ligonier Valley,
Westmoreland County, Pa., November 12, 1782; attended the common schools and graduated from
Jefferson College (later Washington and Jefferson College), Washington, Pa., in 1810; taught school
1810-1812; studied law in Cincinnati, Ohio; admitted to the bar and practiced; moved to Madison,
Indiana Territory, in 1813; became a printer and owner of the second printing press set up in the
Territory; proprietor of the Western Eagle; elected to the territorial legislature in 1813 and 1814, and
was chosen speaker of the Assembly in 1814; territorial printer; secretary of the first State
constitutional convention in 1816; upon the admission of Indiana as a State into the Union was elected
to the Fourteenth Congress; reelected to the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Congresses and
served from December 11, 1816, until his resignation July 25, 1822, to become Governor; Governor
of Indiana 1822-1825, when he resigned to become a Senator; elected to the United States Senate in
1824; reelected in 1830 and served from March 4, 1825, to March 3, 1837; unsuccessful candidate
for reelection in 1836; chairman, Committee on Roads and Canals (Twenty-first through
Twenty-fourth Congresses); resumed the practice of law in Madison, Ind.; trustee of Indiana
University at Bloomington 1829-1840; died in Madison, Ind., May 16, 1850; interment in Fairmount
Cemetery.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; Hill, Frederick. William Hendricks Political Circulars
to His Constituents: First Senatorial Term, 1826-1831. Indiana Magazine of History 71 (June 1975): 124-80; Hill, Frederick. William Hendricks Political Circulars to His
Constituents: Second Senatorial Term, 1831-1837. Indiana Magazine of History
71 (December 1975): 319-74.
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