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Jonathan Stutzman Books in Order
Jonathan Jennings was an American politician who was the first governor of the State of Indiana and a nine-term congressman from Indiana. Born in either Hunterdon County, New Jersey, or Rockbridge County, Virginia, he studied law before migrating to the Indiana Territory in 1806. Jennings initially intended to practice law, but took jobs as an assistant at the federal land office at Vincennes and assistant to the clerk of the territorial legislature to support himself and pursued interests in land speculation and politics. Jennings became involved in a dispute with the territorial governor, William Henry Harrison, that soon led him to enter politics and set the tone for his early political career. In 1808 Jennings moved to the eastern part of the Indiana Territory and settled near Charlestown, in Clark County. He was elected as the Indiana Territory's delegate to the U.S. Congress by dividing the pro-Harrison supporters and running as an anti-Harrison candidate. By 1812, he was the leader of the anti-slavery and pro-statehood faction of the territorial government. Jennings and his political allies took control of the territorial assembly and dominated governmental affairs after the resignation of Governor Harrison in 1812. As a congressional delegate Jennings aided passage of the Enabling Act in 1816, which authorized the organization of Indiana's state government and state constitution. He was elected president of the Indiana constitutional convention, held in Corydon in June 1816, where he helped draft the state's first constitution. Jennings supported the effort to ban slavery in the state and favored a strong legislative branch of government.
Bibliography verified: March 2026
Quick Answer
What are all of Jonathan Stutzman's book series? Jonathan Stutzman has written 4 book series. The most notable is the A Llama Book series.
Complete series list with all books in reading order below.
Book Series by Jonathan Stutzman
- #1
Llama Destroys the World(2019) - #2
Llama Unleashes the Alpacalypse(2020) - #3
Llama Rocks the Cradle of Chaos(2022)
- #1
The Elephant's Nose(2015) - #2
Don't Feed the Coos!(2020) - #3
The Night Is for Darkness(2020) - #4
Santa Baby(2020) - #5
Butts Are Everywhere(2020) - #6
Bear Is a Bear(2021) - #7
The Mouse Who Carried a House on His Back(2022) - #8
Soon, Your Hands(2023) - #9
Tiny T. Rex and the Grand Ta-Da!(2023)
- #1
Fitz and Cleo(2021) - #2
Fitz and Cleo Get Creative(2022)
- #1
Tiny T. Rex and the Impossible Hug(2019) - #2
Tiny T. Rex and the Very Dark Dark(2020) - #3
Tiny T. Rex and the Perfect Valentine(2020) - #4
Tiny T. Rex and the Tricks of Treating(2021) - #5
Tiny T. Rex and the First-Day Oopsies(2025)
About Jonathan Stutzman
Jonathan Jennings was an American politician who was the first governor of the State of Indiana and a nine-term congressman from Indiana. Born in either Hunterdon County, New Jersey, or Rockbridge County, Virginia, he studied law before migrating to the Indiana Territory in 1806. Jennings initially intended to practice law, but took jobs as an assistant at the federal land office at Vincennes and assistant to the clerk of the territorial legislature to support himself and pursued interests in land speculation and politics. Jennings became involved in a dispute with the territorial governor, William Henry Harrison, that soon led him to enter politics and set the tone for his early political career. In 1808 Jennings moved to the eastern part of the Indiana Territory and settled near Charlestown, in Clark County. He was elected as the Indiana Territory's delegate to the U.S. Congress by dividing the pro-Harrison supporters and running as an anti-Harrison candidate. By 1812, he was the leader of the anti-slavery and pro-statehood faction of the territorial government. Jennings and his political allies took control of the territorial assembly and dominated governmental affairs after the resignation of Governor Harrison in 1812. As a congressional delegate Jennings aided passage of the Enabling Act in 1816, which authorized the organization of Indiana's state government and state constitution. He was elected president of the Indiana constitutional convention, held in Corydon in June 1816, where he helped draft the state's first constitution. Jennings supported the effort to ban slavery in the state and favored a strong legislative branch of government.
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