William Lee D Ewing
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William Lee D. Ewing

Personal data
Date of birthAugust 31, 1795
Place of birthParis, Kentucky
Date of deathMarch 25, 1846(age 50)
Place of deathSpringfield, Illinois
Political partyDemocratic
ProfessionLawyer
Military service
Service/branchIllinois Militia
Battles/warsBlack Hawk War
5 Governor of Illinois
In officeNovember 17, 1834 - December 3, 1834
Succeeded byJoseph Duncan
Preceded byJohn Reynolds

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William Lee Davidson Ewing (August 31, 1795 - March 25, 1846) was a politician from Illinois who served partial terms as the fifth governor of the state and as U.S. Senator.

Ewing was born in Paris, Kentucky and practiced law in Shawneetown, Illinois. James Monroe appointed him to be a land office receiver in Vandalia in 1820. He served as a Colonel of the "Spy Battalion" during the Black Hawk War. In 1830, he was elected to serve in the state House of Representatives as Speaker. He had previously been the clerk of the House. From 1832 to 1834, he was a State Senator, serving as President pro tempore of the State Senate in 1832. In 1833, he was also named acting Lieutenant Governor of Illinois and served as Governor of Illinois for fourteen days in 1834. As of 2009, this was the shortest gubernatorial term in Illinois history.

Upon the death of Elias Kane in 1835, Ewing was appointed by Joseph Duncan to serve out the rest of Kane's term in the U.S. Senate. His re-election campaign was unsuccessful and he returned to the Illinois State House, becoming Speaker of the House again. He died in Springfield, Illinois, and although some claim he is buried in Oak Ridge Cemetery, the cemetery itself has no record of this.


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NBA Free Agent Rumors: LeBron James To See New Jersey Nets, Knicks First - Bleacher Report Tweet this news
Bleacher Report--It was a chance to play with Patrick -Ewing- and compete for a championship. I don't regret it for one minute." "When I came to the Knicks I was just entering ... - Date : Mon, 28 Jun 2010 16:30:18 GMT+00:00

Preceded by
John Reynolds
Governor of Illinois
1834
Succeeded by
Joseph Duncan
Preceded by
James Shields
Illinois Auditor of Public Accounts
1843 - 1846
Succeeded by
Thomas H. Campbell



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