Cornelius P. Van Ness (born January 26, 1782 in Kinderhook, New York; died December 15, 1852 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) succeeded Richard Skinner as the tenth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 10, 1823 and October 13, 1826, including the whole of 1824.
Thomas Chittenden (born January 6, 1730 in East Guilford, Connecticut; died August 25, 1797 in Willston, Vermont), the first Governor of Vermont, served between March 4, 1791 and August 25, 1797. Following the end of Chittenden's term as Governor, Paul Brigham (born January 6, 1746 in Coventry, Connecticut; died June 15, 1824 in Norwich, Vermont) became the second Governor of Vermont, serving between August 25, 1797 and October 16, 1797. Following the end of Brigham's term as Governor, Isaac Tichenor (born February 8, 1754 in Newark, New Jersey; died December 11, 1838 in Bennington, Vermont) became the third Governor of Vermont, serving between October 16, 1797 and October 9, 1807.
Vermont does not have term limits.
Jonathan Hunt - Vermont Lieutenant Governor - was born in 1738.
Jonathan Hunt - Vermont Lieutenant Governor - died in 1808.
Charles MacCarthy - governor - died in 1824.
Phil Scott is the current Governor of Vermont. He was elected Governor in 2016 and assumed office on January 5, 2017. The Governor of Vermont is elected every two years and has no term limit.
Governor of Louisiana (1824-1828).
Charles Pinckney - governor - died on 1824-10-29.
The Governor of Vermont in July 2015 is Peter Shumlin. He was elected Governor on 2 Nov 2010, 6 Nov 2012 and 4 Nov 2014.
Thomas Chittenden.
Jim Douglas.
Vermont