Charles Stewart Todd
Colonel Charles Stewart Todd was an American military officer and government official.
Charles Stewart Todd was the son of Supreme Court Associate Justice Thomas Todd and his first wife, Elizabeth Harris. He was born near Danville, Kentucky, and continued to reside here through his childhood and adult life. Todd briefly attended Transylvania University before his transfer and graduation at the College of William and Mary in 1809. He briefly studied law with his father in Washington before attending Litchfield Law School. After his admission to the bar in 1811, he started his practice in Lexington, KY.
Shortly after, he volunteered in the War of 1812 where he was a subaltern and judge-advocate of General James Winchester's division in the War of 1812. In 1813, he was made a captain of infantry, and was an aide to General William Henry Harrison in the Battle of the Thames. In March, 1815, he was made Aide-de-Camp to Governor Isaac Shelby, with the rank of Colonel. During this time, Todd established a legal practice in the Kentucky state capital of Frankfort, KY where his diplomatic and political career began to expand. On June 16, 1816 he married the youngest of Isaac Shelby's daughters, Letitia, with whom he had 12 children.
He served as a state representative in the years following his political establishment in Frankfort, and in 1817, he was appointed Secretary of State of Kentucky. In 1820, Todd was appointed a Confidential Agent to Gran Colombia, where he would remain until 1824. US. President James Monroe offered Todd a position to the secretaryship of the delegation to Colombia in 1823 but he declined the offer. Instead he went to retire in Shelby County, Kentucky where he worked on his farm and took up writing.
Todd came out of his retirement upon being appointed Minister to Russia From 1841 to 1846 he served as the fifteenth United States Ambassador to Russia during the entirety of President Tyler's administration. He then went back to his retirement in 1846 and spent his time raising livestock and writing. He refused a later nomination for Governor of Kentucky, but remained politically active during Zachary Taylor's presidential campaign of 1848. He took interest in the state of Texas and their railroad system, along with developing his writing interests. He took positions as an editor of Louisville Industrial and Commercial Gazette and the Cincinnati Republican.
He died in 1871 from pneumonia, in Baton Rouge, LA at the home of his son-in-law Judge Posey. He was buried at Rosehill Elmwood Cemetery in Owensboro, KY.