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Senate Years of Service: 1893-1901 Party: Democrat
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LINDSAY, William, a Senator from Kentucky; born near Lexington, Rockbridge County, Va.,
September 4, 1835; attended the common schools; settled in Clinton, Hickman County, Ky., in
1854; taught school and studied law; admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Clinton in 1858;
during the Civil War served in the infantry in the Confederate Army from July 1861 until May 1865;
resumed the practice of law in Clinton, Ky.; member, State senate 1867-1870; judge of the
Kentucky Court of Appeals 1870-1878; chief justice of the court 1876-1878; resumed the practice
of his profession in Frankfort, Ky.; member, State senate 1889-1893; served as United States
Commissioner to the Worlds Columbian Exposition, held at Chicago, Ill., 1893; elected as a
Democrat to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John G. Carlisle;
reelected in January 1894 and served from February 15, 1893, until March 3, 1901; was not a
candidate for renomination in 1900; chairman, Committee on Indian Depredations (Fifty-third
Congress), Committee on Revolutionary Claims (Fifty-sixth Congress); moved to New York City and
resumed the practice of his profession; appointed United States Commissioner to the Louisiana
Purchase Exposition at St. Louis in 1901; died in Frankfort, Franklin County, Ky., October 15, 1909;
interment in the State Cemetery.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography;
Schlup, Leonard. William Lindsay and the 1896 Party Crisis. Register of the Kentucky
Historical Society 66 (January 1978): 22-23.
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