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This profile was automatically generated using 32 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 32 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 32 references Web References
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1. governorsbio
www.genealogytrails.com/ind/go - [Cached]Published on: 7/29/2007 Last Visited: 12/4/2007
James Brown Ray Governor of Indiana
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JAMES BROWN RAY was born in Kentucky, studied law in Cincinnati, and moved to Brookville, Indiana, in 1818. In 1821 he was elected to the Indiana House of Representatives and in 1822 to the Indiana State Senate. When Ratliff Boon, the lieutenant governor, resigned in January 1824, to run for Congress, Ray was elected president protempore of the state senate, and then Ray filled out the unexpired term of Governor William Hendricks when the latter was elected to the United States Senate in January 1825.
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Ray was subsequently elected twice to his own term as governor. He was quite young when first elected governor and was accused of being younger than the constitutionally required thirty years old. Ray was the last nonpartisan candidate to be elected governor in Indiana.
During Ray's administration the construction of the Michigan Road and the Wabash and Erie Canal was undertaken, and Ray served as a commissioner to negotiate treaties with the Potawatomi and Miami Indians in 1826. A hotheaded man, he engaged in long, rancorous public altercations with his political opponents during his second term. After his terms as governor he practiced law in Indianapolis with little success.
Ray was tall and wore his hair long and tied in a queue. A man described as "striking" and "egotistical," he was eccentric in his later years. No matter where he went, Ray always signed himself as "J. B. Ray, governor of Indiana and commander in chief of the army and navy."
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NOAH NOBLE was born in Virginia and moved to Brookville, Indiana, in 1811 to join his brother James, a prominent lawyer and later United States senator. -
2. www.ai.org
www.ai.org/idem/rules/boards.h - [Cached]Published on: 3/4/2007 Last Visited: 3/4/2007
James Ray, Chief -
3. www.franklincountyin.com
www.franklincountyin.com/histo - [Cached]Published on: 10/4/2007 Last Visited: 10/4/2007
Indiana governors James Brown Ray, David Wallace and Noah Noble, known as the "Brookville Triumvirate," in that they all had lived in the town of Brookville in Franklin County, Indiana and served consecutive terms in the office of Governor of Indiana.
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Noble and former governor Ray were political enemies.

