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James Chamberlain Jones (1809 - October 29, 1859) was governor of Tennessee from 1841 to 1845.
A thin man whose nickname was "Lean Jimmy", Jones was born in Davidson County, Tennessee and was the first native-born Tennessean to be elected governor. He had been educated as a lawyer, but was farming in Wilson County when elected to the state legislature in 1839. A Whig, he opposed incumbent Governor James K. Polk for re-election in 1841, defeating the future President. He was said to have been the first Tennessee politician to master the art of "stump" speaking (which often at the time literally consisted of delivering a speech from atop a freshly cut tree stump). When Polk opposed him for a second term in 1843, Jones defeated him again.
While he was governor, Nashville, which had been serving as the temporary captial of the state for years (as had several other places before it) was officially selected as the capital city of Tennessee on a permanent basis. Prominent architect William Strickland, a student of Benjamin Latrobe, was selected to design a Capitol buliding, and the cornerstone for it was actually laid while Jones was still governor. However, Jones did not seek a third term, choosing instead to accept an offer to become president of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad. He later served one term in the United States Senate, from 1851 to 1857.