Joseph A. Wright (born April 17, 1810 in Washington, Pennsylvania; died May 11, 1867 in Berlin, Germany) succeeded Paris C. Dunning as the tenth Governor of Indiana, serving between December 5, 1849 and January 12, 1857, including the whole of 1854.
Thomas R. Marshall (born March 14, 1854 in North Manchester, Indiana; died June 1, 1925 in Washington DC) succeeded Frank Hanly as the twenty-seventh Governor of Indiana, serving between January 11, 1909 and January 13, 1913, including the whole of 1911.
Thomas R. Marshall (born March 14, 1854 in North Manchester, Indiana; died June 1, 1925 in Washington DC) succeeded Frank Hanly as the twenty-seventh Governor of Indiana, serving between January 11, 1909 and January 13, 1913, including the whole of 1912.
Thomas R. Marshall (born March 14, 1854 in North Manchester, Indiana; died June 1, 1925 in Washington DC) succeeded Frank Hanly as the twenty-seventh Governor of Indiana, serving between January 11, 1909 and January 13, 1913. Following the end of Marshall's term as Governor of Indiana, Samuel M. Ralston (born December 1, 1857 in New Cumberland, Ohio; died October 14, 1925 in Indianapolis, Indiana) became the twenty-eighth Governor of Indiana, serving between January 13, 1913 and January 8, 1917.
Arthur Young - governor - was born in 1854.
The 19th state is Indiana. No governor of Indiana ever went on to be President. William Henry Harrison was governor of Indiana Territory before Indiana was a state.
The current Governor of Indiana is Mitch Daniels (R). Daniels assumed office as the 49th Governor of Indiana on January 10, 2005. His second term will expire on January 14, 2013. The governor-elect is Mike Pence.
William Henry Harrison was the Governor of the Indiana Territory from 1801 until 1812.
Otis Bowen was the governor of Indiana from January 8, 1973 to January 12, 1981.
Mike Pence, former governor of Indiana.
John Davis - Massachusetts governor - died on 1854-04-19.
Pence was the governor of Indiana.
Jonathan Jennings was the first governer of Indiana.