Earle C. Clements
Earle C. Clements | |
---|---|
Clements in 1947 | |
United States Senator from Kentucky | |
In office November 27, 1950 – January 3, 1957 | |
Preceded by | Garrett L. Withers |
Succeeded by | Thruston B. Morton |
47th Governor of Kentucky | |
In office December 9, 1947 – November 27, 1950 | |
Lieutenant | Lawrence W. Wetherby |
Preceded by | Simeon S. Willis |
Succeeded by | Lawrence W. Wetherby |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Kentucky's 2nd district | |
In office January 3, 1945 – January 6, 1948 | |
Preceded by | Beverly M. Vincent |
Succeeded by | John A. Whitaker |
Member of the Kentucky Senate | |
In office 1941–1944 | |
Personal details | |
Born |
Morganfield, Kentucky, U.S. | October 22, 1896
Died |
March 12, 1985 88) Morganfield, Kentucky, U.S. | (aged
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Sara M. Blue |
Alma mater | University of Kentucky |
Profession | Farmer and politician |
Religion | Christianity |
Military service | |
Service/branch | United States Army |
Years of service | 1917–1919 |
Rank | Captain |
Battles/wars | World War I |
Earle Chester Clements (October 22, 1896 – March 12, 1985) was an American farmer and politician. He represented the state of Kentucky in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate and was its 47th Governor, serving from 1947 to 1950. For three decades, he was the leader of a faction of the state's Democratic Party that stood in opposition to the faction led by two-time governor and senator A. B. "Happy" Chandler.
After following his father into the local politics of his home county, Clements agreed to chair the gubernatorial campaign of Thomas Rhea in 1935. Already committed to Rhea, he turned down an offer from Happy Chandler to chair his campaign, beginning the rift between the two men. Clements went on to the Kentucky Senate in 1941. In 1944, he was selected as Democratic floor leader of the senate and successfully campaigned for a larger budget than that proposed by Republican governor Simeon Willis. His stand against Willis made him popular in the Democratic Party, and he went on to serve two terms in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1944 to 1948.
In 1947, Clements succeeded Willis as governor, defeating Harry Lee Waterfield, Chandler's preferred candidate, in the Democratic primary. As governor, Clements raised taxes and used the revenue to increase funding for the state park system and construct and maintain more roads. He also achieved advancements in education, including some progress toward desegregation. In 1950, Clements was elected to the U.S. Senate. He resigned as governor to accept his Senate seat. While in the Senate, he served as chairman of the Senate Democratic Reelection Committee and as Democratic party whip under party leader Lyndon Johnson. He was defeated by Thruston Morton in his re-election bid in 1956; a lack of support from Chandler (then serving his second term as governor) contributed to Clements' defeat. At Johnson's insistence, Clements resumed chairing the Senate Democratic Reelection Committee in 1957 and 1959.
Clements had supported Bert T. Combs for governor against Chandler in 1955, and did so again against Harry Lee Waterfield in 1959. Combs defeated Waterfield and rewarded Clements by appointing him state highway commissioner. In 1961, Clements and Combs split over a proposed deal to lease dump trucks from a Louisville car dealer. State newspapers charged that the deal was payback to the dealer, a Combs supporter. When Combs canceled the deal Clements took it as a public rebuke and soon after resigned to work on the presidential campaign of his friend, Lyndon Johnson. Following his split with Combs, Clements allied himself with the Chandler faction, opposing Combs' lieutenant governor, Wilson Wyatt in his bid to unseat Senator Thruston Morton. Clements' influence declined rapidly after the split with Combs, and by the 1963 gubernatorial race, he was unable to deliver his home county for Chandler in the primary against Edward T. Breathitt. Clements died in his hometown of Morganfield, Kentucky on March 12, 1985.
Early life
Earle C. Clements was born in Morganfield, Kentucky on October 22, 1896.[1] He was the youngest of two sons and four daughters born to Aaron Waller and Sallie Anna (Tuley) Clements.[2] His father was a popular county judge and sheriff in Union County, but Clements at first shunned a political career.[2] He obtained his early education in the public schools, and graduated from Morganfield High School in 1915.[1][3] Later in 1915, he enrolled at the University of Kentucky's College of Agriculture.[3] In 1915 and 1916, he played center on the football team, and was named to the "All-Southern Team" in 1916.[3] He was also a member of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity.[4]
Clements' studies were interrupted by World War I.[5] On July 9, 1917, he enlisted as a private in Company M of the Kentucky National Guard.[6] The company was ordered to Camp Taylor near Louisville, Kentucky where they were mustered into the infantry of the U.S. Army.[6] Clements first served as a guard at Camp Taylor and later entered the Officers Training School at Fort Benjamin Harrison near Indianapolis, Indiana.[6] He graduated with the rank of first lieutenant and remained stateside as a professor of military science.[2][6] He served for a total of 28 months, attaining the rank of captain, and was discharged on September 12, 1919.[6]
After the war, Clements worked as a rigger in the oil fields of east Texas.[2] In 1921, however, his father's health began to fail, and he returned to Kentucky to help him on the farm and served as his deputy sheriff.[2] As a hobby, he also coached football at his high school alma mater.[5] One of his assistant coaches, Rodes K. Myers, would go on to be lieutenant governor under Keen Johnson.[7] On January 18, 1927, Clements married Sara M. Blue.[3][5] Their only child, Elizabeth (Bess) Hughes Clements Abell, became social secretary to Lady Bird Johnson and Walter Mondale.[8]
Political career
In 1922, Clements' father died, and Clements was appointed to serve out the remainder of his term.[2] He was subsequently elected to the office; his term ended in 1925.[1][2] In 1926, he was elected county clerk. He served two terms in that office, with his tenure ending January 1, 1934.[3] Later in 1934, he was elected county judge.[1] During his two terms, which lasted until 1941, he ordered the paving of 123 miles of road in the county—more than all the previous county judges combined—despite the financial hardships of the Great Depression.[9]
In 1935, Thomas Rhea asked Clements to serve as his campaign chairman for the 1935 gubernatorial race.[9] Clements accepted, and consequently had to refuse a later request from his boyhood friend, A. B. "Happy" Chandler, to fill the same position for his campaign.[9] Chandler won the Democratic primary, and for decades following, Clements and Chandler led opposite factions of the Kentucky Democratic Party.[5] Chandler claimed that Clements bolted the party and supported Republican candidate King Swope in the general election; Clements denied this, but admitted that he gave Chandler's campaign only minimal support.[10]
Clements was elected to the Kentucky Senate in 1941, representing Union, Webster, and Henderson counties.[3] By 1944, he had risen to the post of majority leader in that body and played a central role in writing the state's budget that year.[5] Due to Clements' efforts, educational appropriations were increased far above what had been called for by Republican governor Simeon Willis.[9]
Clements' face-off with Willis won him popularity and helped him win a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, representing Kentucky's second district, in 1944.[9] He was re-elected in 1946.[1] A New Deal Democrat, Clements voted to increase funding to the Rural Electrification Administration and advocated for the 1945 National School Lunch Act.[9] He supported expansion of agricultural research and reorganization of the Farm Security Administration.[9] He endorsed conservation and wildlife programs and additional funding to federal parks.[9] He supported civil rights legislation, including bans on lynching and poll taxes.[9] He opposed the Taft-Hartley Act and voted to disband the House Un-American Activities Committee.[9][11] His service on the Select House Committee on Food Shortages gave him the chance to interact closely with President Harry S. Truman.[9]
Governor
Though encouraged to run for a seat in the Senate in 1946, Clements instead made the race for governor in 1947.[12] In the Democratic primary, he faced Harry Lee Waterfield, a former Speaker of the Kentucky House of Representatives.[5] Not known for his oratory or personality, Clements was a masterful campaign organizer.[7] He secured the support of western Kentucky Democrats by allying himself with Logan County political boss Emerson "Doc" Beauchamp.[7] He chose Lexington Herald-Leader editor Tom Underwood as his campaign manager, strengthening his influence in central Kentucky.[7] He befriended Lawrence Wetherby of Jefferson County which helped him with the urban vote and Carl D. Perkins of Knott County which helped him in rural eastern Kentucky.[7]
During the primary campaign, two major issues surfaced. First, Waterfield favored a tax on parimutuel betting, while Clements opposed it.[7] Second, Waterfield supported the development of electric power generation through public utilities, while Clements favored private development (which won him the support of the Kentucky Utilities company).[13] The Clements campaign also attacked Waterfield for being deemed physically unfit for military service.[13] Clements received a late boost when he gained the endorsement of John Y. Brown, Sr., garnering added support from organized labor.[13] Ultimately, Clements defeated Waterfield by over 30,000 votes.[5]
In the general election, Clements faced Republican state attorney general Eldon S. Dummit.[5] While Clements managed to keep the Democrats united following the primary, Dummit had fractured the Republicans by attacking the administration of sitting Republican governor Simeon S. Willis and his preferred successor during the Republican primary.[13] Dummit mounted a meager challenge by citing Clements' opposition to the Taft-Hartley Act, but this was not very effective.[13] Dummit had replaced his campaign manager from the primary election, and when the ousted manager turned against him in the general election, it sounded the death knell for his campaign.[13] Clements won the election by a vote of 387,795 to 287,756.[5] He resigned his seat in the U.S. House to accept the governorship.[1]
As governor, Clements enjoyed a three-to-one Democratic majority in both houses of the state legislature.[14] As a result, much of his proposed legislative agenda was passed.[13] In the 1948 legislative session, the General Assembly attracted new businesses by lowering taxes on stocks and bonds and the inheritance tax, but offset these cuts by approving Clements' proposals to increase taxes on gasoline and distilled spirits.[13] Clements also reversed his campaign stance against a tax on parimutuel betting, reportedly proposing a three percent tax because he feared a higher rate would be proposed if he did not take the initiative.[15] With this new revenue, Clements authorized $6 million to improve and expand the state park system.[16] The improvement program included twelve large parks and several smaller ones, with Kentucky Dam Park being the centerpiece.[16] To oversee the developments, he appointed Henry Ward as commissioner of conservation.[17] Between 1948 and 1950, New York was the only state that spent more than Kentucky on its park system.[5] Clements was one of several people who have been referred to as the "father of Kentucky's state parks".[17] Although the park system was started in 1926 by Willard Rouse Jillson, Clements did much to develop them during his administration.[17]
Clements authorized significant road building projects. During his administration, the state funded or built 3,800 miles of rural roads and 4,000 miles of primary roads.[16] Further, he initiated construction of the Kentucky Turnpike and the Western Kentucky Parkway.[16] The state also assumed maintenance of 6,000 miles of county roads under Clements.[16] During Clements' tenure, only Texas spent more money on developing its roads.[5] Besides improving the roadways themselves, Clements replaced the Kentucky Highway Patrol, which had become a corrupt vehicle of political patronage, with the Kentucky State Police.[5] Clements also used some of the revenue generated from his tax increases to raise the salaries of the state's public school teachers.[14] He approved a 15% increase in funding to the Minimum Foundation Program which provided funding for poor school districts.[5] This was not enough, however, to stave off a 1950 protest march on his office by teachers demanding that he raise another $10 million for education.[18] Clements' lieutenant governor and successor, Lawrence Wetherby, was able to meet this demand in 1951 by using increased tax revenue resulting from the Korean War.[18]
Leading national accreditation groups attempted to disaccredit many of Kentucky's public colleges during Clements administration in order to end longstanding political interference in the higher education system.[19] Clements worked to help these colleges maintain their accreditation and to secure re-accreditation for Morehead State Teachers College.[19] In 1948, he weakened Kentucky's Day Law—which enforced segregation of the state's education system—by providing an exception for black medical personnel to take post-graduate courses in white public hospitals.[20] He also supported a 1948 bill that allowed blacks to pursue medical training at the University of Louisville.[19] His efforts to secure a similar arrangement at the University of Kentucky were not successful, despite the governor's status as ex-officio chairman of the Board of Trustees.[19] In 1949, the federal district court in Lexington granted blacks admission to programs at the University of Kentucky if an equivalent program was not available at Kentucky State College, the state's historically black college.[19]
Clements also created or reorganized several government agencies. In cooperation with Pennsylvania governor James H. Duff, he created the Ohio River Sanitation Commission (ORANSCO) to combat pollution in the Ohio River and its tributaries.[19] He curbed fraud in the insurance industry by reorganizing the state Insurance Commission and hiring a national prominent expert to rewrite the state's entire insurance code.[19] To assist the General Assembly in writing more effective and efficient legislation, Clements created the non-partisan Legislative Research Commission, stocked with professionals from various disciplines, to conduct governmental research.[16] He created the Kentucky Agriculture and Industrial Board (the predecessor of the current Kentucky Department of Commerce), which attracted 250 new industries to the state and created 40,000 new jobs during its first three years.[16] He also created the Kentucky Building Commission to manage and plan all new state buildings.[16] Among the commission's first projects were a new $6 million capitol annex and the construction of a new state fairgrounds.[16] To retain the most qualified government employees, he supported a constitutional amendment that quadrupled the minimum annual salary for state employees from $5,000 to $20,000.[19]
Though a strong governor with many successes, Clements was not able to enact his full legislative agenda. In 1948, his proposal to create a centralized board that governed all Kentucky colleges failed in the General Assembly.[15] In both the 1948 and 1950 legislative sessions, Clements failed to convince the General Assembly to regulate strip mining.[18] He also failed in his attempts to establish statewide pension and civil service programs, and was unable to enact a merit system for state employees.[21] Attempts to fund a veterans' bonus passed the two houses of the General Assembly in different forms and were unable to be reconciled.[21]
Senator
When Alben Barkley resigned his Senate seat to assume the office of vice president in 1948, Clements had appointed Garrett L. Withers to fill the vacancy.[3] Barkley's term was to expire in 1950, and near the end of the term, Withers resigned, allowing Clements to run in a special election to fill both the remainder of Withers' term and a full six-year term simultaneously.[3] He won the election over Republican Charles I. Dawson by a vote of 300,276 to 256,876.[5] On November 27, 1950, he resigned as governor to assume the seat.[5]
The Democrats lost seats in the Senate in the 1950 election cycle, and party leader Ernest McFarland removed Clinton Anderson as chairman of the Senate Democratic Reelection Committee, replacing him with Clements for the 1952 election cycle.[22] Clements advocated better cooperation between his committee and the Democratic National Committee in 1952.[22] However, Republicans won the presidency and both houses of Congress in 1952, and the Democratic National Committee talked openly of disbanding the Reelection Committee.[22] Clements instead advised that his committee's responsibilities be expanded and that its activities become year-round rather than seasonal.[22]
In 1953, Clements was appointed Democratic party whip, serving under party leader Lyndon B. Johnson.[5] In addition, he retained his chairmanship of the Senate Democratic Reelection Committee for the 1954 election cycle.[22] He and Democratic National Committee chair Stephen Mitchell agreed that the two committees should conduct separate fund-raising operations in order to maximize donations for Democratic candidates.[23] Democrats regained control of the Senate in 1954, and Clements instituted the practice of having his committee provide transition services for freshman senators.[24] That practice continues today.[24]
Clements remained active in state politics, leading a faction of the Democratic party that opposed Happy Chander. As the 1955 gubernatorial election grew closer, Chandler announced he would seek a second term in office, having previously served from 1935 to 1939.[25] With Clements' former lieutenant governor, Lawrence Wetherby, ineligible to succeed himself as governor, the Clements faction scrambled to find a candidate to challenge Chandler.[25] The most likely choice was Wetherby's lieutenant governor, Emerson "Doc" Beauchamp, but his uninspiring persona and ties to boss-dominated Logan County made him unacceptable to Clements.[25] Instead, Clements threw his support to Bert T. Combs, a Court of Appeals judge nominated by Wetherby.[25] Since Combs had little in the way of a political record to run against, Chandler focused his campaign attacks on factional leaders Clements and Wetherby, who he nicknamed "Clementine and Wetherbine".[25] These attacks, combined with a poorly run campaign by Combs, allowed Chandler to win the Democratic primary by a margin of 18,000 votes.[25] He went on to win the general election and a second gubernatorial term.[25]
Clements began his campaign for re-election in 1956 by defeating Joe Bates, the candidate favored by Chandler, in the Democratic senatorial primary.[26] On April 30, 1956, Kentucky senator Alben Barkley died suddenly of a heart attack.[25] With the Democratic primary already over, the Democratic State Central Committee was charged with selecting a candidate to run for Barkley's seat.[25] They chose Wetherby, Clements' former lieutenant governor.[25] Journalist John Ed Pearce later recorded that Clements had favored Chandler's choice, Joseph Leary, as a candidate rather than Wetherby.[27] Clements didn't think Leary had a very good chance of winning, but he felt Leary's selection would keep Chandler from throwing his support to the Republican candidates.[27]
Republican president Dwight D. Eisenhower convinced John Sherman Cooper, a former senator and ambassador who was immensely popular in Kentucky, to challenge Wetherby, hoping his presence on the ticket would aid his own re-election bid.[28] In the Republican primary, voters chose Thruston B. Morton to challenge Clements.[29] With two of his factional enemies as candidates for the Senate, Governor Chandler bolted the party and supported the Republican candidates.[28] Further complicating Clements' campaign was the fact that Senate majority leader Lyndon Johnson suffered a heart attack in 1956, and as majority whip, Clements had to spend much of his time in Washington, D.C. covering Johnson's duties in the Senate.[28] What time he was in Kentucky was usually devoted to Wetherby's campaign, since the Democrats believed Clements would be re-elected easily while Wetherby faced much stiffer odds.[28] These factors, combined with the landslide of support for Eisenhower, the Republican presidential candidate, contributed to the defeat of both Wetherby and Clements.[29] Cooper defeated Wetherby by 65,000 votes, while Clements lost to Morton by a margin of 7,000 votes out of more than 1 million that were cast in the election.[29] It was Clements' first defeat for elected office in a career that spanned thirty years.[29]
Later life
Clements never again sought an elected office after his defeat by Morton, though he remained active in state politics and continued to lead the anti-Chandler faction of his party.[29] From 1957 to 1959, at the insistence of Lyndon Johnson, he served as executive director of the United States Senate Democratic Campaign Committee and helped ensure the election of a fourteen-seat Democratic majority in the Senate.[18] He considered running for governor again in 1959, but ultimately decided against it.[30] Without Clements in the race, the anti-Chandler faction was unable to unite behind either former candidate Bert T. Combs or former Louisville mayor Wilson Wyatt.[31] Clements united the faction behind Combs, making Wilson Wyatt their candidate for lieutenant governor and promising him support for later races.[31] Combs defeated the Chandler candidate, Harry Lee Waterfield in the Democratic primary and went on to win the general election.[31]
In 1960, Combs appointed Clements as state highway commissioner.[1] Some state newspapers charged that Clements had demanded this post at the head of the state's largest executive department in exchange for supporting Combs, a charge Combs denied.[32] Others wondered if Clements took the post in order to organize the state political machinery for his friend Lyndon Johnson, who was rumored to be considering a run for president.[32] Still others believed that, from his powerful post, Clements would be the real governor and Combs only a puppet.[32]
Scandal continued to plague Clements as highway commissioner. In March 1960, news broke that the highway department was about to lease 34 used dump trucks at a very favorable price from Louisville Ford dealer Thurston Cooke, who had served as finance chairman for Combs' gubernatorial campaign.[33][34] Some charged that this amounted to a political payoff by Clements.[35] Combs, already under fire for appointing Clements, canceled the lease bid on April 19.[36] Clements was offended by this action and considered it a public rebuke.[37] The incident caused a rift between Combs and Clements that never fully healed, although Clements did not resign immediately.[36]
In August 1960, Clements met with Combs and told him he wanted to resign to work for the vice-presidential campaign of Lyndon Johnson.[38] Combs called a press conference and announced that Clements' resignation would be effective September 1 and that he would be replaced by Henry Ward.[38] The resignation was the end of the Clements faction of the state Democratic party.[39] His split with Combs was so severe that he allied with his longtime foe, Happy Chandler, against the new Combs faction of the party.[40] In the 1962 senatorial race, Clements opposed Wilson Wyatt's challenge to Senator Thruston Morton.[37] Morton won re-election, ending Wyatt's political career.[37] Chandler again sought the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in 1963. Clements appeared on stage with Chandler at a rally where Chandler claimed that Combs had arranged the truck deal to discredit Clements.[41] Chandler hoped to damage Combs' reputation and, by extension, that of his hand-picked successor Edward T. Breathitt.[41] His strategy was unsuccessful; Breathitt carried the primary and went on to win the general election. Clements' waning influence was evidenced by the fact that Breathitt carried Union County by a vote of 2,528 to 1,913.[42]
From 1961 to 1963, Clements was a consultant for the American Merchant Marine Institute.[1] He then returned to Washington as a lobbyist and as an executive with the Tobacco Institute.[43] In 1981, he retired to his hometown of Morganfield.[5] After several years of illness, he died March 12, 1985 and was buried at the Odd Fellows Cemetery in Morganfield.[1][8] In 1980, the Breckinridge Job Corps Center in Morganfield was renamed the Earle C. Clements Job Corps Center.[44]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Earle C. Clements" in Biographical Directory
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Syvertsen in Kentucky's Governors, p. 185
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Powell, p. 100
- ↑ Pearce, p. 47
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Harrison in The Kentucky Encyclopedia, p. 206
- 1 2 3 4 5 Jillson, p. 377
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Klotter, p. 330
- 1 2 Syvertsen in Kentucky's Governors, p. 190
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Syvertsen in Kentucky's Governors, p. 186
- ↑ Pearce, p. 39
- ↑ Pearce, p. 48
- ↑ Syvertsen in Kentucky's Governors, pp. 186–187
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Klotter, p. 331
- 1 2 Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 401
- 1 2 Klotter, p. 332
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Syvertsen in Kentucky's Governors, p. 187
- 1 2 3 Pearce, p. 51
- 1 2 3 4 Syvertsen in Kentucky's Governors, p. 189
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Syvertsen in Kentucky's Governors, p. 188
- ↑ Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 385
- 1 2 Klotter, p. 335
- 1 2 3 4 5 Kolodny, p. 83
- ↑ Kolodny, p. 84
- 1 2 Kolodny, p. 85
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 403
- ↑ Pearce, p. 72
- 1 2 Pearce, p. 73
- 1 2 3 4 Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 404
- 1 2 3 4 5 Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 405
- ↑ Pearce, p. 78
- 1 2 3 Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 407
- 1 2 3 Pearce, p. 107
- ↑ Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 408
- ↑ Pearce, pp. 133, 135
- ↑ Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, pp. 408–409
- 1 2 Pearce, p. 137
- 1 2 3 Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 409
- 1 2 Pearce, p. 150
- ↑ Pearce, p. 151
- ↑ Pearce, p. 152
- 1 2 Pearce, p. 214
- ↑ Pearce, p. 215
- ↑ "Former Senator Earle C. Clements Named Tobacco Institute President"
- ↑ "About Us", Earle C. Clements Job Corps Center
Bibliography
- "About Us". Earle C. Clements Job Corps Center. 2009-04-01. Retrieved 2009-10-06.
- United States Congress. "Earle C. Clements (id: C000506)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
- "Former Senator Earle C. Clements Named Tobacco Institute President" (PDF) (Press release). Brown & Williamson. 1966-02-23. Retrieved 2009-10-05.
- Harrison, Lowell H. (1992). "Clements, Earle Chester". In Kleber, John E. The Kentucky Encyclopedia. Associate editors: Thomas D. Clark, Lowell H. Harrison, and James C. Klotter. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1772-0.
- Harrison, Lowell H.; James C. Klotter (1997). A New History of Kentucky. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2008-X. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
- Jillson, Willard Rouse (January 1948). "Governor Earle C. Clements". The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 46.
- "Kentucky Governor Earle Chester Clements". National Governors Association. Retrieved 2012-04-03.
- Klotter, James C. (1996). Kentucky: Portraits in Paradox, 1900–1950. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-916968-24-3. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
- Kolodny, Robin (1998). Pursuing Majorities: Congressional Compaign Committees in American Politics. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3070-5.
- Pearce, John Ed (1987). Divide and Dissent: Kentucky Politics 1930–1963. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1613-9.
- Powell, Robert A. (1976). Kentucky Governors. Danville, Kentucky: Bluegrass Printing Company. OCLC 2690774.
- Syvertsen, Thomas H. (2004). "Earle Chester Clements". In Lowell Hayes Harrison. Kentucky's Governors. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2326-7.
Further reading
- Luhr, Gary; Thomas H. Syvertsen (May 1983). "The Governor Who Broke New Ground". Rural Kentuckian 37: 8–12.
External links
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