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  1. Samuel Lewis Southard (June 9, 1787 – June 26, 1842) was a prominent American statesman of the early 19th century, serving as a U.S. Senator, Secretary of the Navy, and the tenth governor of New Jersey.

  2. Samuel Lewis Southard war ein US-amerikanischer Politiker und von 1832 bis 1833 Gouverneur des Bundesstaates New Jersey. Von 1821 bis 1823 und von 1833 bis zu seinem Tod vertrat er seinen Staat im US-Senat; von 1823 bis 1829 war er Marineminister unter den Präsidenten James Monroe und John Quincy Adams.

  3. President James Monroe appointed him secretary of the Navy (1823-1829), but Southard would also serve temporarily as secretary of the treasury (1825) and secretary of war (1828). Following his time in the cabinet, Southard became attorney general of New Jersey (1829-1833) and was later elected governor of the state (1832-1833).

  4. 16. Apr. 2024 · Southard, Samuel L. (Samuel Lewis), 1787-1842. Abstract: This collection consists of papers of New Jersey politician, lawyer, and governor Samuel Lewis Southard, presenting a rather comprehensive view of Southard's personal and professional life, as well as the state of American politics and the law profession during the first half ...

    • Steven Knowlton
    • 2008
  5. Samuel Lewis Southard war ein US-amerikanischer Politiker und von 1832 bis 1833 Gouverneur des Bundesstaates New Jersey. Von 1821 bis 1823 und von 1833 bis zu seinem Tod vertrat er seinen Staat im US-Senat; von 1823 bis 1829 war er Marineminister unter den Präsidenten James Monroe und John Quincy Adams.

  6. Biography of Samuel L. Southard, one of New Jersey's most distinguished political leaders. Southard (1787-1842) participated in most of the major political controversies of his era, from the bitter Federalist-Republican competition during the War of 1812 through the rise and flowering of the second American party system.

  7. Attorney General. 1829-1833. Samuel L. Southard was born in Basking Ridge, New Jersey on June 9, 1787. He was educated in a classical school run by Reverend Bob Finley. He attended the College of New Jersey, which later became Princeton University, where he graduated in 1804.