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152. Massachusetts 1804 Governor
153. Massachusetts 1805 Governor
154. Massachusetts 1806 Governor
155. Massachusetts 1807 Governor
156. Massachusetts 1808 Governor
157. Massachusetts 1809 Governor
158. Massachusetts 1810 Governor
159. Massachusetts 1811 Governor
160. Massachusetts 1812 Governor
161. Massachusetts 1813 Governor
162. Massachusetts 1814 Governor
163. Massachusetts 1815 Governor
164. Massachusetts 1816 Governor
165. Massachusetts 1817 Governor
166. Massachusetts 1818 Governor
167. Massachusetts 1819 Governor
168. Massachusetts 1820 Governor
169. Massachusetts 1821 Governor
170. Massachusetts 1822 Governor
171. Massachusetts 1823 Governor
172. Massachusetts 1824 Governor
173. Mississippi 1817 Governor
174. Mississippi 1819 Governor
175. Mississippi 1821 Governor
176. Mississippi 1823 Governor
177. Missouri 1820 Governor
178. Missouri 1824 Governor
179. New Hampshire 1787 President
180. New Hampshire 1788 President
181. New Hampshire 1789 Governor
182. New Hampshire 1790 Governor
183. New Hampshire 1790 President, Ballot 2
184. New Hampshire 1791 Governor
185. New Hampshire 1792 Governor
186. New Hampshire 1793 Governor
187. New Hampshire 1794 Governor
188. New Hampshire 1795 Governor
189. New Hampshire 1796 Governor
190. New Hampshire 1797 Governor
191. New Hampshire 1798 Governor
192. New Hampshire 1799 Governor
193. New Hampshire 1800 Governor
194. New Hampshire 1801 Governor
195. New Hampshire 1802 Governor
196. New Hampshire 1803 Governor
197. New Hampshire 1804 Governor
198. New Hampshire 1805 Governor
199. New Hampshire 1806 Governor
200. New Hampshire 1807 Governor
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Governor
An official appointed to govern a province, country, town, etc. Now used as the official title of the representative of the Crown in a British colony or dependency; also of the executive head of each of the United States.
Oxford English Dictionary
Historical Note: In many state (Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, North Caorlina, South Carolina, Virginia) this was a position elected by the State Legislature rather than by popular vote. In the New England states, the election of the Governor required a majority vote and if no majority was achieved then the Governor was elected by the State Legislature.
Historical Note: Prior to the 1792 revisions to its state constitution, the title of the executive head of New Hampshire was "President".
1787-1824: Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia
Office Scope: State
Role Scope: State