David S. Walker

American judge and politician (1815–1891)


title: "David S. Walker" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["governors-of-florida", "justices-of-the-supreme-court-of-florida", "members-of-the-florida-house-of-representatives", "florida-state-senators", "1815-births", "1891-deaths", "florida-whigs", "florida-constitutional-unionists", "democratic-party-governors-of-florida", "mayors-of-tallahassee,-florida", "people-from-russellville,-kentucky", "people-from-tallahassee,-florida", "19th-century-florida-state-court-judges", "barbour-family", "19th-century-members-of-the-florida-legislature"] description: "American judge and politician (1815–1891)" topic_path: "people/1810s" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_S._Walker" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American judge and politician (1815–1891) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox officeholder"]

FieldValue
nameDavid Shelby Walker
imageFlorida Governor David S. Walker.jpg
order18th
office1Governor of Florida
term_start1December 20, 1865
term_end1July 4, 1868
lieutenant1William W. J. Kelly
predecessor1William Marvin
successor1Harrison Reed
office2Mayor of Tallahassee, Florida
term21852
predecessor2D. P. Hogue
successor2Richard Hayward
office3Member of the Florida House of Representatives
term31848
office4Member of the Florida Senate
term41845
birth_dateMay 2, 1815
birth_placeLogan County, Kentucky
death_dateJuly 20, 1891 (aged 76)
death_placeTallahassee, Florida
partyWhig (before 1856)
Know Nothing (1856)
Constitutional Unionist (1860-1861)
Democratic (from 1861)
spousePhiloclea Alston
Elizabeth Duncan
parentsDavid Walker
::

|name = David Shelby Walker |image = Florida Governor David S. Walker.jpg |order1 = 8th |office1 = Governor of Florida |term_start1 = December 20, 1865 |term_end1 = July 4, 1868 |lieutenant1 = William W. J. Kelly |predecessor1 = William Marvin |successor1 = Harrison Reed |office2 = Mayor of Tallahassee, Florida |term2 = 1852 |predecessor2 = D. P. Hogue |successor2 = Richard Hayward |office3 = Member of the Florida House of Representatives |term3 = 1848 |office4 = Member of the Florida Senate |term4 = 1845 |birth_date = May 2, 1815 |birth_place = Logan County, Kentucky |death_date = July 20, 1891 (aged 76) |death_place = Tallahassee, Florida |party = Whig (before 1856) Know Nothing (1856) Constitutional Unionist (1860-1861) Democratic (from 1861) |spouse = Philoclea Alston Elizabeth Duncan | parents = David Walker |religion =

David Shelby Walker (May 2, 1815 – July 20, 1891) was the eighth Governor of Florida, serving from 1865 to 1868. He served in the Florida House of Representatives and as Mayor of Tallahassee. He also served as a judge. He was a Whig before shifting parties.

Early life and career

Walker was born near Russellville in Logan County, Kentucky. He attended private schools in Kentucky and Tennessee and studied law. He moved to Florida in 1837, settling in Leon County. His father was David Walker, a prominent early Kentucky politician who served in the U.S. House of Representatives. David S. Walker was a cousin and close business and political confidante of Florida territorial governor Richard K. Call. He was also related to Florida Senator Wilkinson Call, who was Walker's law partner for several years in the 1850s and 1860s in Tallahassee.

Walker entered politics as a Whig and was elected to the first session of the Florida State Legislature in 1845, serving Wakulla and Leon Counties as a senator. In 1848, he was elected by Leon County to the Florida House of Representatives. In 1849, he was appointed Register of Public Lands and was ex officio State Superintendent of Public Instruction, positions he held until 1854. He advocated and promoted interest in public schools. His efforts resulted in creating public schools in Tallahassee. He served as Mayor of Tallahassee. He was the Know Nothing gubernatorial candidate in 1856 but lost to Democrat Madison S. Perry by 2.6 points. In 1859, he became a Florida Supreme Court Justice. Walker is also known for establishing Tallahassee's first library in the mid-1800s through his private funds in a time where money was not allocated to libraries outside of urban areas, especially in a "rural" state.

Governorship

Before the American Civil War, Walker was a Constitutional Unionist and so had opposed secession. However, when Florida declared secession from the United States in 1861, he supported his state. Following the war, on November 29, 1865, Walker was elected governor unopposed in an election in which newly freed slaves were not allowed to participate. He was inaugurated on December 20 and took office January 18, 1866.

During his governorship, Florida transitioned from the federal oversight and military occupation of Reconstruction to readmission into the Union. Walker was a conservative who attempted to minimize changes to the antebellum social, political, and economic system. He protested the election of the 1868 Constitutional Convention, which was convened to adopt a new government that the Republican U.S. Congress would approve. He ultimately supported the 1868 Constitution when it turned out to be less protective of blacks than initially anticipated.

He did not run for reelection in the 1868 election, the first in which African American men could vote.

He returned to practicing law after leaving the governor's office on July 4, 1868. In 1878, he was appointed circuit court judge, a position he held until his death on July 20, 1891.

Legacy

Tallahassee's first public library is the David S. Walker Library.

References

Sources

References

  1. Bender, Michael. (November 2, 2010). "Best governor's race since Sidney Catts?". Tampa Bay Times.
  2. Brown Jr., Canter. (1997). "Ossian Bingley Hart: Florida's Loyalist Reconstruction Governor". LSU Press.
  3. Springtime Tallahassee, "About Us," http://www.springtimetallahassee.com.
  4. Pearia, A. A. (2007). Preserving the past: Library development in Florida and the New Deal, 1933-1942. Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations. Paper 2058. Florida State University.
  5. Dubin, Michael J.. (2010). "United States Gubernatorial Elections, 1861-1911: The Official Results by State and County". McFarland.
  6. (2001). "Andrew Johnson: A Biographical Companion". [[ABC-CLIO]].
  7. (May 9, 1868). "Florida Election: The Constitution Ratified". Florida Union.

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governors-of-floridajustices-of-the-supreme-court-of-floridamembers-of-the-florida-house-of-representativesflorida-state-senators1815-births1891-deathsflorida-whigsflorida-constitutional-unionistsdemocratic-party-governors-of-floridamayors-of-tallahassee,-floridapeople-from-russellville,-kentuckypeople-from-tallahassee,-florida19th-century-florida-state-court-judgesbarbour-family19th-century-members-of-the-florida-legislature