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| Book Review | Indiana Magazine of History, 103.2 | The History Cooperative
103.2  
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June, 2007
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Reviews

Jonathan Jennings
Indiana's First Governor

By Randy K. Mills
(Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society Press, 2005. Illustrations, notes, select bibliography. $19.95.)


Jonathan Jennings (1784–1834) is best remembered as Indiana's first governor and a five-term member of Congress, but he was also one of two top leaders in the Indiana Territory—his rival William Henry Harrison was the other. But Jennings has not fared well with historians over the years; instead, as Randy Mills has noted, the politician's reputation has plummeted from its pinnacle, when he was treated as the one who kept slavery out of Indiana, to his current status as a "mediocre" leader or, worse, "a weak-willed alcoholic" (pp. xi-xii). 1
      Neither extreme, of course, is accurate, and in this work, an early volume in the Indiana Biography series recently launched by the Indiana Historical Society Press, Mills provides the first full biography of a still enigmatic figure in the tumultuous world of Indiana frontier politics. The author skillfully weaves his way through the limited historiography on the man, supplemented by deep and thorough research into many relevant contemporary sources—newspapers, published correspondence, memoirs, and travel accounts (but not manuscripts)—and offers a useful, sympathetic portrait of a politician whose intemperance (also an aspect of frontier politics) eventually ended his career prematurely. . . .

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