Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Isaac Goodnight

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Preceded by
  
W. Godfrey Hunter

Profession
  
Lawyer

Party
  
Democratic Party

Alma mater
  
Cumberland University

Education
  
Cumberland University


Political party
  
Democratic

Spouse
  
Ella Hoy

Name
  
Isaac Goodnight

Succeeded by
  
W. Godfrey Hunter

Isaac Goodnight

Born
  
January 31, 1849 Allen County, Kentucky (
1849-01-31
)

Role
  
Former United States Representative

Died
  
July 24, 1901, Franklin, Kentucky, United States

Previous office
  
Representative (KY 3rd District) 1889–1895

Resting place
  
Green Lawn Cemetery

Isaac Herschel Goodnight (January 31, 1849 – July 24, 1901) was a United States Representative from Kentucky.

Contents

Early life and family

Isaac Goodnight was born near Scottsville, Kentucky on January 31, 1849. He was the son of Isaac and Lucinda (Billingsby) Goodnight. His father was born January 1, 1782 at the old fort near Harrodsburg, Kentucky and is believed to have been the first white male child born in what is now Kentucky.

Goodnight attended the common schools of the area. In 1870, his family moved to Franklin, Kentucky. He matriculated to Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee earning a degree in 1872 a law degree in 1873. He returned to Franklin, serving as deputy circuit clerk while reading law, and was admitted to the bar in 1874. He commenced practice in Franklin.

On March 12, 1879, Goodnight married Ella Hoy. The couple had one son, Hoy Goodnight.

Political career

In 1877, Goodnight was elected to the Kentucky House of Representatives, serving a single, two-year term. He served as the chairman of the Democratic Kentucky convention at Louisville, Kentucky in 1891. He was elected to represent the Third District in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1888. He was twice re-elected, serving in the Fifty-first, Fifty-second, and Fifty-third Congresses (March 4, 1889 – March 3, 1895). During his tenure, he was a member of the Judiciary Committee, rising to third in seniority on that committee by the end of his third term.

Later life and death

Due to ill health and the fact that his absence from home was hurting his legal practice, Goodnight did not seek re-election in 1894. After leaving Congress, he was elected a judge of the seventh Kentucky circuit in 1897 and served until his death in Franklin on July 24, 1901. He was buried in Green Lawn Cemetery.

References

Isaac Goodnight Wikipedia