Hardin later moved to Frankfort and was elected to the Kentucky House to represent Franklin County. GovernorIsaac Shelby appointed him Secretary of State soon after his election. Concurrent with his service, he participated in the War of 1812, serving alongside future Kentucky Governor George Madison as majors in ColonelJohn Allen's militia unit. Following the expiration of his term as Secretary of State, Governor Gabriel Slaughter appointed Hardin to the U.S. Senate seat vacated by William T. Barry, who resigned. Hardin served the remainder of Barry's term – approximately one year – and did not seek re-election. In 1819, he was elected to the Kentucky House for a third time and was chosen Speaker of the House. He died October 8, 1823.
Hardin was born June 21, 1780, along the Monongahela River in western Pennsylvania.[1] He was the eldest son of ColonelJohn and Jane (Davies) Hardin.[2] Named for his grandfather, he adopted the middle initial "D." to distinguish between them.[3] The Hardin family moved to Kentucky in April 1786, settling near the present-day city of Springfield in Washington (then Nelson) County.[3][4]
In his work Life of Lincoln, Ward Hill Lamon promoted the notion that Abraham Lincoln was an illegitimate child of Nancy Hanks; Hardin was proffered as Lincoln's potential father.[9] In a 1920 essay, William Barton opines that Hardin's paternity was unlikely since both he and Hanks were married at the time, and because Hardin's usual travels – to his law practice in Richmond and to state business in Frankfort – took him in the opposite direction of Nancy Hanks-Lincoln's house.[9] The rumor arose from an inability to locate Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks' marriage license at the courthouse in Hardin County, Kentucky; the license was later found in the courthouse in Washington County, effectively discrediting the rumor.[10]
Political career
Politically, Hardin favored the construction of internal improvements at federal expense and adhered to a loose interpretation of the U.S. Constitution.[3] His entry in the 1936 Dictionary of American Biography notes that, while some of his fellow Kentuckians believed he was a Federalist, Hardin was actually a national Democrat who probably would have associated with the Whig Party had he lived long enough to see its formation.[3]
In April 1812, as the War of 1812 became more imminent, Hardin wrote to Isaac Shelby, Kentucky's first governor and a hero of the Revolutionary War, asking him to consent to being a candidate in the upcoming gubernatorial election.[11] Shelby went on to win the election, and Hardin, who had by this time relocated to Frankfort, was elected to represent Franklin County in the Kentucky House.[8] In August 1812, shortly after the election, Shelby appointed Hardin Secretary of State.[3] According to Shelby's executive journal, Hardin resigned on or before February 3, 1813.[12] The next day, Shelby nominated Hardin's assistant, former Governor Christopher Greenup, to replace him.[12] Greenup served only a month, resigning on March 11, 1813, after which Hardin was re-appointed and served for the remainder of Shelby's term.[12]
On November 13, 1816, Governor Gabriel Slaughter appointed Hardin to the U.S. Senate seat vacated when William T. Barry resigned.[8] The appointment was only effective until the General Assembly convened later that year.[3] When the Kentucky Senate convened, the senators elected him to serve out the remainder of Barry's term.[3] Hardin did not seek re-election at the expiration of the term.[3] In total, he served from November 13, 1816, to March 3, 1817.[1]
In 1818, Hardin returned to the Kentucky House, serving until 1820 and acting as Speaker of the House from 1819 to 1820.[1]
Later life and death
In December 1820, Hardin was a candidate to become president of the Bank of Kentucky, but John Harvie was chosen instead.[8] The following year, he was chosen as a member of the Electoral College, voting for James Monroe.[8]