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Moonlight In Kansas

Thomas
Moonlight was born November 10, 1833. He was the "son"
of a poor, industrious farmer who owned a farm near Arbroath called
Boysack Muir, in Forfarshire, Scotland, 1833. The story goes that
his "parents" were sitting by the fireside one evening
when they heard the sobbing of a small infant outside their door.
It was late. The couple cautiously opened their front door and
looked out into the moonlight. An abandoned baby was lying in
a basket outside their house. The baby was brought up by that
kindly couple. Because it was not truly their baby, they did not
give it their surname but called it “Moonlight”. Little did they
know it but the name of Moonlight would survive for three centuries
and that young baby would be the founder of a famous family.
Thomas
Moonlight came to America when he was thirteen years old. After
Moonlight turned twenty, he enlisted in the Fourth Artillery C.
D., May 17, 1853. The fall of that year he was ordered to Texas
and served there until the fall of 1856. Moonlight rose to the
rank of orderly sergeant and then settled in Leavenworth County,
Kansas in 1860.
When
the Civil War broke out in 1861 Moonlight raised a light battery
and was mustered in as a captain of artillery. Promoted to lieutenant-colonel
of the Eleventh Kansas Infantry, September 20,1862, Moonlight
then made the rank of colonel, April 25, 1864. Ordered to Fort
Laramie in the spring of 1865, the regiment was distributed to
various posts and stations throughout the northern subdistricts
of the plains. Colonel Thomas Moonlight was placed in command
at that time. Jim Bridger, the famed mountain scout, acted as
guide to Thomas Moonlight on his expedition from Fort Laramie
to Wind River, while he was in command of Fort Laramie.
Moonlight's
Republican contacts obtained him positions as a presidential elector
in 1864, and helped him be appointed United States Collector of
Internal Revenue in 1867. Although elected Secretary of State
for Kansas in 1868, Moonlight soon severed his relations with
the Republican party due to his views on prohibition and became
a Democrat in 1870. He was elected State Senator for Leavenworth
County in 1872 and then appointed Governor of Wyoming Territory
by President Cleveland on January 5, 1887. Governor Moonlight
took the oath of office January 24, 1887 serving until April 9,
1889 and continued in government service as Minister to Bolivia
for President Cleveland from 1893 to 1897. Thomas Moonlight died
February 7, 1899, at Leavenworth, Kansas.
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