Richard James Oglesby (born July 25, 1824 in Oldham County, Kentucky; died April 24, 1899 in Elkhart, Illinois) succeeded John Marshall Hamilton as the fourteenth Governor of Illinois, serving between January 30, 1885 and January 14, 1889. Following the end of Oglesby's term as Governor, Joseph W. Fifer (born October 28, 1840 in Staunton, Virginia; died August 6, 1938 in Bloomington, Illinois) became the nineteenth Governor of Illinois, serving between January 14, 1889 and January 10, 1893.
Joseph W. Fifer (born October 28, 1840 in Staunton, Virginia; died August 6, 1938 in Bloomington, Illinois) succeeded Richard J. Oglesby as the nineteenth Governor of Illinois, serving between January 14, 1889 and January 10, 1893, including the whole of 1890.
Joseph W. Fifer (born October 28, 1840 in Staunton, Virginia; died August 6, 1938 in Bloomington, Illinois) succeeded Richard J. Oglesby as the nineteenth Governor of Illinois, serving between January 14, 1889 and January 10, 1893, including the whole of 1891.
Richard James Oglesby (born July 25, 1824 in Oldham County, Kentucky; died April 24, 1899 in Elkhart, Illinois) succeeded John Marshall Hamilton as the fourteenth Governor of Illinois, serving between January 30, 1885 and January 14, 1889, including the whole of 1886.
Richard James Oglesby (born July 25, 1824 in Oldham County, Kentucky; died April 24, 1899 in Elkhart, Illinois) succeeded John Marshall Hamilton as the fourteenth Governor of Illinois, serving between January 30, 1885 and January 14, 1889, including the whole of 1888.
John Marshall Hamilton (born May 28, 1847 in Ridgewood, Ohio; died September 22, 1905 in Chicago, Illinois) succeeded Shelby Moore Cullom as the eighteenth Governor of Illinois, serving between February 16, 1883 and January 30, 1885. Following the end of Hamilton's term as Governor, Richard James Oglesby (born July 25, 1824 in Oldham County, Kentucky; died April 24, 1899 in Elkhart, Illinois) renewed his term as the fourteenth Governor of Illinois, serving between January 30, 1885 and January 14, 1889.
Joseph W. Fifer (born October 28, 1840 in Staunton, Virginia; died August 6, 1938 in Bloomington, Illinois) succeeded Richard J. Oglesby as the nineteenth Governor of Illinois, serving between January 14, 1889 and January 10, 1893. Following the end of Fifer's term as Governor, John Peter Altgeld (born December 30, 1847 in Westerwald, Germany; died March 12, 1902 in Joliet, Illinois) became the twentieth Governor of Illinois, serving between January 10, 1893 and January 11, 1897.
The attorney General of Illinois is third in line.
The Chief Executive Officer of the state of Illinois is the governor. In 2014, the governor of Illinois was Pat Quinn. He took the office in 2009.
The current Illinois governor is a Republican.
The current governor of Illinois is a Republican.
Yes, the Office of Governor of Illinois is not restricted by term limits.
Barack Obama was never governor of Illinois. He represented Illinois in the United States Senate.