Politics In 1872, he was selected to serve as the delegate-at-large for the Colorado Territory at the
Republican National Convention. In 1873, he started working for the
United States Mint and later married Nellie Davidson, a white woman. However, Caroline Catherine Butcher arrived in Denver and accused Hardin of being a
bigamist, moving to the western United States to avoid being drafted into the army, and of being the father of Mary Elizabeth, who was born in 1858. Hardin claimed that he was a minor and she was a slave at the time of the marriage making it illegal. Although he was not charged with bigamy he was fired from his position at the mint. In 1873, he and Davidson moved to
Cheyenne,
Wyoming Territory.
Wyoming Territorial House of Representatives In 1879, he was elected to Wyoming's Territorial House of Representatives after placing third as a
fusion candidate with the Democratic and Republican nominations, thus becoming the first black member of the Wyoming Legislature. In 1880, he was reelected, although he had attempted to have his name removed from the ballot, after finishing eighth with 1,277 votes and became the only member of the House to serve in both the sixth and seventh sessions. On November 4, 1879, he introduced Speaker H. L. Myrick and was selected to serve on the Indian and Military Affairs committee and on the two-member Joint Standing Committee on Printing. ==Later life==