Samuel B. Moore

Samuel B. Moore
6th Governor of Alabama
In office
March 3, 1831  November 26, 1831
Preceded by Gabriel Moore
Succeeded by John Gayle
Personal details
Born June 6, 1789
Beech Hill, Tennessee
Died November 7, 1846 (age 57)
Carrollton, Alabama
Political party Democratic
Religion Methodist

Samuel B. Moore (1789 November 7, 1846) was the sixth Governor of the U.S. state of Alabama from March 3 to November 26, 1831. He was president of the Alabama Senate when Governor Gabriel Moore was elected to the United States Senate, and so became governor when Gabriel Moore resigned to take the seat.

Biography

Samuel Moore was born in Franklin County, Tennessee, on June 6, 1789 but moved to Jackson County, Alabama when he was still young.

His political career began in 1823 when he was elected to the Alabama House of Representatives and then elected to the Alabama Senate in 1828. He served as president of the Senate in 1831 when he succeeded Gabriel Moore.

Like his predecessor, Samuel Moore continued to survey the Coosa River through The Board of Internal Improvement, build infrastructure, and oppose nullification. Moore strongly supported the Bank of the State of Alabama.[1]

Later, in 1831, Moore was entrenched in a heated election battle against John Gayle, who eventually defeated the incumbent. After his defeat, he served as the judge of the Pickens County Court from 1835 to 1841.[2]

He was re-elected to his State Senate post in 1834, and again served as the Senate's president in 1835. He later returned home to Pickens County, Alabama, and served on its county court from 1835 until 1841.

Moore died in 1846 at age 57 and is interred at the city cemetery in Carrollton in Pickens County.

References

  1. "Alabama Governors: Samuel B. Moore". Alabama Department of Archives and History. Retrieved 2012-06-27.
  2. "Alabama Governors: Samuel B. Moore". Alabama Department of Archives and History. Retrieved 2012-06-27.

Biographies

Political offices
Preceded by
Gabriel Moore
Governor of Alabama
1831
Succeeded by
John Gayle
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