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Gubernatorial Profile

Governor John Sevier

John Sevier served as Governor of Tennessee.

Profile Timeline

  • Entered office.
  • Left office.
  • 1803 - 1809 1796 - 1801 Time in office.

JOHN SEVIER was born in Augusta County, Virginia. He studied law after attending Augusta Academy in Staunton, Virginia. He farmed for a decade and then moved to the Tennessee country. He was a delegate from the Watauga Settlements to the Provisional Congress of North Carolina in 1776, and as a Lieutenant Colonel took part in the Battle of King’s Mountain in 1780. He was Clerk of the Washington County Court (then in North Carolina and now in Tennessee) from 1778 to 1785 and governor of the proclaimed “State of Franklin” from 1785 to 1788. [What is now Tennessee was originally an area of North Carolina known as Washington County. Indebtedness to the federal government led North Carolina to cede the area to federal authorities but colonists who opposed the cession sought admission to statehood instead, first under the name “Franklin,” in honor of Benjamin Franklin. Despite North Carolina’s opposition to the move-which at one point included Sevier’s arrest-the territory won statehood as Tennessee in 1796.] He served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1789 until 1791. He was unanimously elected in convention as Tennessee’s first Governor and inaugurated in March, 1796. He was reelected the following year and again by popular vote-,295 to 12-in 1799. After a two-year break, he defeated incumbent Governor Archibald Roane in 1803 and again in 1805, and won election one final time in 1807 running unopposed. As governor, Sevier helped define Tennessee’s boundaries, negotiated with Indian tribes, and planned legislation designed to promote the state’s growth and progress. After retiring from the state house, he served one term in the Tennessee General Assembly, after which he was elected to three successive terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, serving until his death in Fort Decatur, Alabama while working with a congressional committee to fix the boundary line between Georgia and the Creek Indian Territory in Alabama. His remains were interred in Knoxville. Sevier County is named for him.