Governor of Kentucky was created in 1792.
John W. Stevenson (born May 4, 1812 in Richmond, Virginia; died August 10, 1886 in Covington, Kentucky) succeeded John L. Helm as the twenty-fifth Governor of Kentucky, serving between September 8, 1867 and February 13, 1871, including the whole of 1868.
John W. Stevenson (born May 4, 1812 in Richmond, Virginia; died August 10, 1886 in Covington, Kentucky) succeeded John L. Helm as the twenty-fifth Governor of Kentucky, serving between September 8, 1867 and February 13, 1871, including the whole of 1869.
John W. Stevenson (born May 4, 1812 in Richmond, Virginia; died August 10, 1886 in Covington, Kentucky) succeeded John L. Helm as the twenty-fifth Governor of Kentucky, serving between September 8, 1867 and February 13, 1871, including the whole of 1870.
As of spring 2015, Steve Beshear is the Governor of Kentucky.
Kentucky doesn't have a president; it has a governor. In 2012, the present governor of Kentucky is Steve Beshear.
John Ireland (born January 21, 1827 in Millerstown, Kentucky; died March 15, 1896 in Seguin, Texas) succeeded Oran M. Roberts as the eighteenth Governor of Texas, serving between January 16, 1883 and January 20, 1887, including the whole of 1886.
The current Governor of Kentucky is Steve Beshear (D). Beshear assumed office as the 61st Governor of Kentucky on December 11, 2007.The current Governor of the US State, Kentucky is Steve Beshear. This is as of July 7, 2014.
Isaac Shelby was the first (and later the 5th) governor of Kentucky state.The first Kentucky Governor after Virginia was split into Virginia and Kentucky in 1792 was Democratic-Republican Isaac Shelby.
Kentucky State University was created in 1886.
Standard Oil of Kentucky was created in 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 1886.