John L. Helm
Photograph of John L. Helm
Photograph by Klauber, undated
18th & 24th Governor of Kentucky
In office
September 3, 1867  September 8, 1867
LieutenantJohn W. Stevenson
Preceded byThomas E. Bramlette
Succeeded byJohn W. Stevenson
In office
July 31, 1850  September 2, 1851
LieutenantVacant
Preceded byJohn J. Crittenden
Succeeded byLazarus W. Powell
14th Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky
In office
September 6, 1848  July 31, 1850
GovernorJohn J. Crittenden
Preceded byArchibald Dixon
Succeeded byJohn Burton Thompson
Other offices
1844Member of the
Kentucky Senate
1826–1843Member of the Kentucky House of Representatives
Personal details
Born(1802-07-04)July 4, 1802
Hardin County, Kentucky, U.S.
DiedSeptember 8, 1867(1867-09-08) (aged 65)
Elizabethtown, Kentucky, U.S.
Political partyDemocrat (from 1865)
Whig (1826–1865)
Spouse
Lucinda Barbour Hardin
(m. 1830)
RelationsBenjamin Hardin
(Father-in-law)
Children11, including Benjamin and Lucinda
ResidenceHelm Place
Profession
Signature

John LaRue Helm (July 4, 1802 – September 8, 1867) was the 18th and 24th governor of the U.S. Commonwealth of Kentucky, although his service in that office totaled less than fourteen months. He also represented Hardin County in both houses of the Kentucky General Assembly and was chosen to be the Speaker of the Kentucky House of Representatives four times. In 1838, his sole bid for federal office ended in defeat when his opponent, Willis Green, was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives.

Helm was first elected to the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1826; between 1826 and 1843 he served eleven one-year terms in the state house. In 1844, he was elected to the state senate, where he served continuously until he was chosen as the Whig Party nominee for lieutenant governor on a ticket with John J. Crittenden, famous for the Crittenden Compromise. The Whigs won the general election and Helm was elevated to governor on July 31, 1850, when Crittenden resigned to accept an appointment as United States Attorney General in President Millard Fillmore's cabinet. After his service as governor Helm became president of the struggling Louisville and Nashville Railroad. He invested thousands of dollars of his own money in the project and convinced residents along the line's main route to buy stock in the company. In 1859, the line was completed, but the next year Helm resigned over of differences with the board of directors regarding a proposed branch that would extend the line to Memphis, Tennessee.

Although he openly opposed secession during the American Civil War, federal military forces labeled Helm a Confederate sympathizer. In September 1862, he was arrested for this alleged sympathy, but Governor James F. Robinson recognized him as he was being transported to a prison in Louisville and had him released. After the war Helm identified with the Democratic Party, and in 1865, Hardin County voters returned him to the state senate. In 1867, he was the state's Democratic candidate for governor. Despite his failing health, Helm made a vigorous canvass of the state and won the general election. He was too weak to travel to Frankfort for his inauguration, so state officials administered the oath of office at his home on September 3, 1867. He died five days later.

Early life

In 1780, Helm's grandfather, Thomas Helm, emigrated to Kentucky from Prince William County, Virginia, and founded the settlement of Helm Station near Elizabethtown, Kentucky, in Hardin County, where John L. Helm was born on July 4, 1802.[1][2][3] He was the eldest of nine children born to George B. Helm, a farmer and politician, and Rebecca LaRue Helm, a descendant of a prominent local pioneer family.[2][4]

Helm attended the area's public schools and studied with noted educator Duff Green.[5] When Helm was 14 his father fell on hard financial times and Helm returned to work on the family farm.[6] In 1818, he took a better-paying job in the office of Samuel Haycraft, the circuit court clerk of Hardin County.[6] While there he read law with Haycraft, then entered the law office of Ben Tobin in 1821.[1]

At about this time, Helm's father traveled to Texas to enter into business and rebuild his finances, but he died there in 1822,[7] leaving Helm responsible for his mother and siblings.[8] He was admitted to the bar in 1823, the same year Meade County, Kentucky, was formed.[3][9] There were no lawyers in the county yet, so although Helm continued living in Hardin County he was made Meade's county attorney.[8] His practice grew rapidly and he was soon able to pay off his father's debts and purchase the Helm homestead.[1] Between 1832 and 1840, he built "Helm Place" on this land and it remained his home for the rest of his life.[1][10]

Benjamin Hardin Helm

In 1823, Helm called on Representative Benjamin Hardin.[11] While Hardin and Helm discussed business, Hardin's 14-year-old daughter, Lucinda, entered the room to show her father a map she had drawn.[11] Helm later claimed it was love at first sight, and began to pursue Lucinda's affections.[11] They courted for seven years, married in 1830 and had six daughters and five sons together.[4][12] One of his sons, Benjamin Hardin Helm, was a Confederate general in the Civil War and was killed at the Battle of Chickamauga.[1]

Political career

Helm Place, built by John L. Helm in 1832

The major political issue in Kentucky during Helm's legal training was the Old Court-New Court controversy. Reeling from the panic of 1819, Kentuckians had demanded debt relief. In response, the Kentucky General Assembly passed an act that granted debtors a grace period of two years in repaying their debts unless their creditors would accept payment in the devalued notes of the Bank of the Commonwealth. The Kentucky Court of Appeals struck down the law, claiming it was in violation of the Contract Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The angered legislature attempted to impeach the justices on the Court of Appeals, but lacked the necessary two-thirds majority. Instead, they abolished the Court of Appeals and replaced it with a new court, which was stocked with more sympathetic justices by pro-relief governor John Adair. Both courts claimed to be Kentucky's court of last resort.[13]

Throughout 1825, Helm made speeches and distributed pamphlets in Hardin and surrounding counties, espousing the Old Court position.[12] In 1826, he campaigned as a Whig for a seat in the Kentucky House of Representatives.[14] Helm won the election, and at the age of twenty-four became one of the youngest members to serve in the Kentucky General Assembly.[9] An Old Court majority was elected to both houses of the General Assembly in 1826, which then passed legislation abolishing the New Court.[15]

Helm was re-elected to the state House in 1827 and 1830, and was re-elected every year from 1833 to 1837.[3] He served as Speaker of the House in 1835 and 1836.[3] In 1837, there was a three-way race for speaker between Helm, James Turner Morehead and Robert P. Letcher.[16] After nine ballots, Helm withdrew and Letcher was elected speaker.[16]

Helm made his only run for federal office in 1838 and was defeated by Willis Green for a seat in the United States House of Representatives.[1] He returned to the Kentucky House in 1839 and was re-elected in 1842 and 1843, serving as Speaker of the House both years.[3] In 1843, the Kentucky General Assembly proposed to create a new county from part of Hardin County and name it Helm County in honor of John L. Helm.[17] Because of the few dissenting votes on this question, Helm declined the honor and proposed instead that the county be called LaRue County after his mother's family, many of whom still lived in the proposed county. Helm's suggestion was unanimously adopted.[17]

Lieutenant governor and governor

John J. Crittenden, who Helm succeeded as governor on July 31, 1850, as painted by Ferdinand G. Walke in 1909

In 1844, Helm was elected to the Kentucky Senate, where he served until 1848.[3] That year he was the Whig candidate for lieutenant governor on a ticket with John J. Crittenden.[1] Helm defeated Democrat John Preston Martin in the general election.[18] The major political question in the state during Helm's time as lieutenant governor was whether to adopt a new state constitution.[17] As a state senator in 1848, Helm had voted to allow the state's citizens to decide the matter in a referendum, but after seeing the document produced by the constitutional convention, he opposed its ratification.[17] In an address to the state senate in 1850, he declared, "I was for reform, and not for revolution. I was for amending the Constitution, and not for obliterating every vital principle in contained."[19] He especially opposed creating an elective judiciary.[20] His antagonism to the constitution put him at odds with his father-in-law, Benjamin Hardin.[19] The two did not reconcile until 1852, as Hardin lay on his deathbed.[19] The new constitution was adopted in 1850 and in June of that year Helm encouraged the people to accept it.[21]

Governor Crittenden resigned on July 31, 1850, to accept President Millard Fillmore's appointment as attorney general, and Helm ascended to the governorship.[1] As governor, Helm vetoed a legislative plan to cover deficits in the public school fund by drawing money from the state's sinking fund, but the General Assembly overrode the veto.[14] He urged the legislature to fund a survey of the state's mineral reserves and a census of the state's agricultural and manufacturing resources.[14] He called for spending on internal improvements and for raising judges' salaries to attract more qualified jurists to the bench.[14][18] He also sought a ban on the carrying of concealed deadly weapons.[14] The legislature did not act on any of these proposed reforms.[14] The only part of Helm's agenda that did progress through the General Assembly was election reform.[14]

President of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad

A portrait of John L. Helm painted by his granddaughter Katherine

Helm was a presidential elector for Winfield Scott in the 1852 presidential election.[1] After this he took twelve years off from politics.[1] As early as 1836, Helm had advocated the construction of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad.[22] On October 2, 1854, he became the railroad's second president.[23] The previous president had been forced out of that position after a disagreement with Louisville's board of aldermen, and construction of the line had almost been abandoned.[24]

Helm worked diligently to convince residents along the line's main route of the economic benefits it would bring.[25] He persuaded many of them to help clear and grade land for the line and accept company stock as payment, and succeeded in selling stock subscriptions to people in the same area.[14][25] Rising labor costs and troubles transporting materials raised expenses far above the projected budget, and at one point Helm personally redeemed $20,000 ($650,000 as of 2024) of the company's bonds.[26] Meanwhile, some observers accused Helm of mismanaging the company.[26] The company's fortunes improved in 1857 when the city of Louisville provided $300,000 ($9.42 million as of 2024) in financial aid and the line was completed on October 18, 1859.[27] Due to Helm's influence, the railroad's charter required all trains traveling through Elizabethtown to stop there.[28]

By the time the line was finished, there were public calls from inside and outside the company for Helm to resign, mostly because of his support for a proposed Memphis branch of the railroad.[29] To complete the branch, the Louisville and Nashville would have to complete a line from Bowling Green to Guthrie, Kentucky.[30] There it would join a line owned by the Memphis and Ohio Railroad that began across the state line at Clarksville, Tennessee, and extended to Memphis.[30] Supporters believed the branch would economically help both Louisville and Memphis and would lessen their dependence on trade along the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers.[31] Opponents argued that the project was simply a ploy to whip up new support for the struggling railroad.[31] Helm endorsed the Memphis branch in his annual report in 1857.[30]

On February 4, 1860, two members of the company's board of directors wrote a letter requesting Helm's resignation; they claimed they had voted for his re-election as president of the company with the understanding that he would resign when the main line between Louisville and Nashville was finished.[32] Helm maintained that he felt an obligation to the citizens of Logan County – many of whom he had personally sold stock to – to remain president until the Memphis branch through their county was built.[32] The rift between Helm and the directors continued to widen, however. Helm resigned on February 21, 1860, and was replaced by James Guthrie.[32] The Memphis branch was completed on September 24, 1860.[33]

Civil War and second term as governor

Engraving of Helm in later life

On January 8, 1861, Helm chaired a meeting in Louisville that advocated for Kentucky's neutrality in the Civil War.[1][9] Helm was an outspoken opponent of secession, but also denounced the election of Abraham Lincoln and his use of military force to subdue the southern states.[9] Because Helm did not condemn his son, Benjamin, for joining the Confederate Army, federal authorities classified him as a southern sympathizer.[34]

After learning of the arrest of former governor Charles S. Morehead by federal authorities, Helm fled to Bowling Green, fearing his own arrest. Through the intervention of Warner Underwood he was able to return home on the condition that he swear an oath of allegiance to the Constitution. Nevertheless, federal soldiers repeatedly entered his home, encouraging his slaves to abandon him, and consuming or destroying his crops. Because the state's courts were closed on account of the war, he was unable to earn a living by practicing law. In short order, his once-substantial fortune was expended, and he resorted to borrowing money to support his family.[35]

In September 1863, Helm and several other citizens from Hardin County were arrested by Colonel Knox. After several days of confinement in Elizabethtown the prisoners were conducted to Louisville. By chance, Kentucky governor James F. Robinson recognized Helm in the group and negotiated with General Jeremiah Boyle to have him released. Shortly after returning home, Helm learned of Benjamin's death at the Battle of Chickamauga.[36]

After the war Helm identified with the Democratic Party, and he returned to the state senate in 1865.[3] During his tenure he chaired the Committee on Federal Relations and fought against punitive and restrictive laws against ex-Confederates.[14] On January 22, 1866, he presented to the state senate a protest against the actions of the United States Congress during the Civil War.[37] It denounced the Reconstruction Amendments on the grounds that they granted powers to the federal government that were reserved for the states, and that they were passed while many southern states were not represented in Congress.[38] He also decried the creation and operation of the Freedmen's Bureau.[39] On January 29, 1867, Helm introduced legislation to organize a meeting in Louisville to rally support for President Andrew Johnson and his efforts to restore the Union.[40]

The state Democratic Convention met on February 22, 1867, in Frankfort and chose Helm and John W. Stevenson as the party's candidates for governor and lieutenant governor, respectively.[40] Helm resigned his seat in the state senate to accept the nomination.[18] Though his health was frail, he determined to canvass the entire state.[41] He continued his call for an end to Civil War bitterness and proscriptions against those who had sided with the Confederacy.[18] He won the general election over Republican Sidney Barnes and a third-party candidate, Judge William B. Kinkead.[18]

The strenuous campaign took a decisive toll on Helm's already weakened body. He was too weak to travel to Frankfort for his inauguration, so the oath of office was administered at his home on September 3, 1867.[2] Helm's secretary of state read the governor's inaugural address at the Hardin County Courthouse.[14] In it, Helm repeated his intent to remove political disabilities from ex-Confederates.[42] He also charged that Congress was meddling in the affairs of the states.[42] Though he promised protections for blacks, he opposed the idea of black suffrage.[42]

Helm died on September 8, 1867, just five days after his inauguration.[3] He was buried in a family graveyard at Helm Place.[3] Helm Place was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 9, 1976.[43]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Powell, p. 46
  2. 1 2 3 Allen, p. 107
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 NGA Bio
  4. 1 2 Owen, p. 68
  5. Biographical Sketch, pp. 16–17
  6. 1 2 Biographical Sketch, p. 18
  7. Biographical Sketch, pp. 15–16
  8. 1 2 Allen, p. 108
  9. 1 2 3 4 Johnson, p. 929
  10. Coleman, p. 51
  11. 1 2 3 Alexander, p. 18
  12. 1 2 Biographical Sketch, p. 23
  13. Biographical Sketch, pp. 21–23
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Owen, p. 69
  15. Biographical Sketch, pp. 23–24
  16. 1 2 Owen, p. 56
  17. 1 2 3 4 NRHP nomination form, p. 10
  18. 1 2 3 4 5 Harrison, p. 422
  19. 1 2 3 Biographical Sketch, p. 34
  20. Green, p. 217
  21. NRHP nomination form, p. 11
  22. NRHP nomination form, pp. 11–12
  23. Klein, p. 9
  24. Klein, pp. 8–9
  25. 1 2 Klein, p. 11
  26. 1 2 Klein, p. 12
  27. Klein, pp. 12, 14
  28. NRHP nomination form, p. 12
  29. Herr, pp. 23, 26
  30. 1 2 3 Klein, p. 20
  31. 1 2 Klein, p. 18
  32. 1 2 3 Herr, p. 26
  33. Klein, p. 22
  34. Biographical Sketch, p. 73
  35. Biographical Sketch, pp. 73–75
  36. Biographical Sketch, pp. 75–77
  37. Biographical Sketch, p. 79
  38. Biographical Sketch, pp. 79–80
  39. Biographical Sketch, p. 82
  40. 1 2 Biographical Sketch, p. 84
  41. Biographical Sketch, p. 86
  42. 1 2 3 Owen, p. 70
  43. NRHP nomination form, p. 1

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Morton, Jennie Chinn (September 1905). "Sketch of Governor John L. Helm". The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 3: 11–14.

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