Andrew J. Applegate
Andrew J. Applegate | |
---|---|
1st Lieutenant Governor of Alabama | |
In office July 24, 1868 – November 26, 1870 | |
Governor | William Hugh Smith |
Succeeded by | Edward H. Moren |
Personal details | |
Born | Georgetown, Ohio | October 14, 1833
Died | August 21, 1870 Chattanooga, Tennessee | (aged 36)
Political party | Republican |
Andrew J. Applegate (October 14, 1833 – August 21, 1870) was the first Lieutenant Governor of Alabama, serving during Reconstruction. A Republican, Applegate served Governor William H. Smith of the same political party, from 1868 to 1870.
A son of Benjamin and Rebecca Applegate, he grew up on a farm near Georgetown, Ohio. His father's family had emigrated from Holland, settling in Pennsylvania and then Kentucky, until finally moving to Ohio. Applegate was educated within the public schools at Georgetown, where he later studied and practiced law. During the American Civil War, Applegate enlisted for one year on July 9, 1861, as a wagoner in the Fourth Independent Company, Ohio Cavalry, but soon became its quartermaster sergeant. In April 1865, he was commissioned captain of Company H, 189th Ohio Infantry. Too late to see action, his regiment was sent to Alabama to serve on occupation duty.
After his discharge, Applegate returned home for his family and moved to Huntsville, Alabama, to open his law practice. In 1867, he was elected as a Radical Republican to serve as a member of the Constitutional Convention to frame a new State constitution. In the election under that constitution, Applegate was Alabama's first and only elected lieutenant governor on August 13, 1868. He moved to Mobile and served Alabama two years as lieutenant governor. He died of mysterious causes in Chattanooga two years later.
External links
- Lieutenant Governors of Alabama
- 1833 births
- 1870 deaths
- People from Georgetown, Ohio
- Politicians from Huntsville, Alabama
- Quartermasters
- Alabama Republicans
- Union Army officers
- American people of Dutch descent
- People of Ohio in the American Civil War
- Radical Republican Party politicians
- 19th-century American politicians
- Military personnel from Huntsville, Alabama
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- 19th-century American lawyers
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