David P. Hogue Explained

Office:20th, 25th, and 28th Mayor of Tallahassee
Term Start2:1850
Term End2:1851
Predecessor2:Thomas J. Perkins
Successor2:David S. Walker
Term Start1:1858
Term End1:1860
Predecessor1:Francis W. Eppes
Successor1:P. T. Pearce
Term Start:1867
Term End:1868
Predecessor:Francis W. Eppes
Successor:Thaddeus Preston Tatum
State Senate3:Florida
District3:8th
Term Start3:1862
Term End3:1864
Office4:4th Florida Attorney General
Governor4:William Dunn Moseley
Thomas Brown
Term Start4:October 14, 1848
Term End4:October 3, 1853
Predecessor4:James T. Archer
Successor4:Mariano D. Papy
Birth Date:12 March 1815
Birth Place:Erie, Pennsylvania
Death Place:Tallahassee, Florida
Party:Whig
Occupation:Reporter
Children:2

David Porter Hogue (March 12, 1815  - November 19, 1871), also known as D. P. Hogue, was an American reporter and politician from the state of Florida. Hogue served as the 4th Florida Attorney General from 1848 until 1853. He also served various terms as Mayor of Tallahassee.[1]

Early life

Hogue was born in Erie, Pennsylvania on March 12, 1815, though his family moved to Maryland and then Virginia when he was young. In 1838, Hogue moved to the Florida Territory, settling in Tallahassee. At some point after this, Hogue was admitted into the Florida Bar.[2]

Political career

In October 1848, Hogue was appointed Florida Attorney General upon the resignation of incumbent James T. Archer. In 1850, while still serving as Attorney General, Hogue was elected to be the 20th Mayor of Tallahassee. He was also a reporter for the Florida Supreme Court.[3] [4] Hogue served out his term as Attorney General in 1853 and did not seek re-election. He also resigned from his mayoral position a couple of years prior in 1851.

In 1858, Hogue was once again elected Mayor of Tallahassee. He served until 1860.

During the American Civil War, Hogue, a Southern Whig, served in the Florida Senate, representing the 8th district from 1862 until 1864. Hogue strongly opposed secession and the war, advising Governor John Milton against further mobilization and to oppose the expansion of the Florida Railroad Company.[5] After the war, Hogue was a delegate to the Florida Constitutional Convention of 1865.[6] While there, he helped repeal Florida's Ordinance of Secession and signed the Florida Constitution of 1865, which was not approved by the U.S. Congress, since it only gave voting rights to free white male citizens.[7] [8] He was again elected Mayor of Tallahassee soon after, serving from 1867 until 1868.

Death and burial

Hogue died of heart disease on November 19, 1871. The night before he died, he was attending a late-night trial at the local circuit court.

Hogue is buried in the Saint Johns Episcopal Church Cemetery in Tallahassee.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: West, Thomas F. . Report of the Attorney General of the State of Florida . 1917 . Capital Publishing Company . Tallahassee . en . Google Books.
  2. News: 1871-11-21 . Hon. D. P. Hogue . Weekly Floridian . Tallahassee . March 25, 2019 . Find a Grave.
  3. Book: Brown, Charles C. Little & James . The American Almanac Repostiory of Useful Knowledge For The Year 1852. . 1852 . Metcalf and Co. . Cambridge . en . Google Books.
  4. Book: Hogue, David P. . Cases Argued and Adjudged in the Supreme Court of Florida . 1847 . . Clisby . J. . 4 . Tallahassee . en . Google Books.
  5. Book: Davis . George W. . The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies . Perry . Leslie J. . Kirkley . Joseph W. . . 1898 . Washington . 358 . 2020-12-25 . Internet Archive.
  6. Book: Convention, Florida Constitutional . Journal of Proceedings of the Convention of Florida: Begun and Held at the Capital of the State, at Tallahassee, Wednesday, October 25th, A.D. 1865 . 1865 . Office of the Floridian . en.
  7. Web site: Florida Constitution of 1865 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20190325183104/https://fall.fsulawrc.com/crc/conhist/1865con.html . 2019-03-25 . 2019-03-25 . Florida State University College of Law.
  8. Web site: Constitution of 1865 . live . 2019-03-25 . . en. https://web.archive.org/web/20111013184807/http://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/189093 . 2011-10-13 .