List of Governors of Texas
Governor of Texas | |
---|---|
| |
Style | The Honorable |
Residence | Texas Governor's Mansion |
Term length | Four years, no term limits |
Inaugural holder |
James Pinckney Henderson 1846 |
Formation | Texas Constitution |
Salary | $150,000 (2013)[1] |
Website | Office of the Governor |
The Governor of Texas is the chief executive of the U.S. State of Texas, the presiding officer over the executive branch of the Texas state government, and the commander-in-chief of the Texas National Guard, the state's militia. The governor has the power to consider bills passed by the Texas Legislature, by signing them into law, or vetoing them, and in bills relating to appropriations, the power of a line-item veto. He may convene the legislature, and grant pardons and reprieves,[2] except in cases of impeachment, and upon the permission of the legislature, in cases of treason. The state provides an official residence, the Governor's Mansion in Austin. The incumbent, Greg Abbott, is the forty-eighth governor, of whom two have been women, to serve in the office since Texas' statehood in 1845.
When compared to those of other states, the Governorship of Texas has been described as one of relative weakness.[3][4] In some respects, it is the Lieutenant Governor of Texas, who presides over the Texas Senate, who possesses greater influence to exercise their prerogatives.[3][4]
The governor is inaugurated on the third Tuesday of January every four years along with the Lieutenant Governor, and serves a term of four years. Prior to the present laws, in 1845, the state's first constitution established the office of governor, serving a term of two years, but no more than four years of every six.[5] The 1861 constitution, following secession from the Union, established the first Monday of November following election as the term's start.[6] Following the end of the American Civil War, the 1866 constitution increased term length to four years, limiting overall service to no more than eight years of every twelve, moving the term's start to the first Thursday following organization of the legislature, or "as soon thereafter as practicable."[7] The constitution of 1869, enacted during Reconstruction, removed term limitations,[8] to this day making Texas one of fourteen states[9] with no limit on gubernatorial terms. The present constitution of 1876 returned terms to two years,[10] but a 1972 amendment again returned them to four.[11]
Since its establishment, four men have served in excess of eight years as governor: Allan Shivers, Price Daniel, John Connally, and Rick Perry. Perry, the longest-serving governor in state history, assumed the governorship in 2000 upon the exit of George W. Bush, who resigned to take office as President of the United States and was re-elected in 2002, 2006 and 2010.
Shivers assumed the governorship upon the death of Beauford Jester in July 1949 and was re-elected in 1950, 1952 and 1954. Daniel was elected to the governorship in 1956 and re-elected in 1958 and 1960 before losing his re-election for an unprecedented fourth term in the 1962 Democratic primary, missing the runoff. Connally was elected in 1962 and re-elected in 1964 and 1966 before choosing to retire in 1968.
In the case of a vacancy in the office, the lieutenant governor becomes governor.[12] Prior to a 1999 amendment, the lieutenant governor only acted as governor until the expiration of the term to which he succeeded.[13][14]
Governors of Spanish Texas
See: List of Texas Governors and Presidents
Governors of Mexican Texas
See: List of Texas Governors and Presidents
Presidents of the Republic of Texas
See: President of the Republic of Texas#List of presidents and vice presidents
Governors of Texas
Party | Governors |
Democratic | 39 |
Republican | 7 |
Unionist | 1 |
Independent | 1 |
Military | 1 |
# | Governor | Picture | Took office | Left office | Party | Lt. Governor | Notes | Terms[15] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | James Pinckney Henderson | February 19, 1846 | December 21, 1847 | Democratic | Albert Clinton Horton | 1 | ||
2 | George T. Wood | December 21, 1847 | December 21, 1849 | Democratic | John Alexander Greer | 1 | ||
3 | Peter Hansborough Bell | December 21, 1849 | November 23, 1853 | Democratic | John Alexander Greer (1849–51) | [16] | ||
James W. Henderson (1851–53) | 1 1/2 | |||||||
4 | James W. Henderson | November 23, 1853 | December 21, 1853 | Democratic | Vacant | [17] | 1/2 | |
5 | Elisha M. Pease | December 21, 1853 | December 21, 1857 | Unionist | David Catchings Dickson (1853–55) | 2 | ||
Hardin Richard Runnels (1855–57) | ||||||||
6 | Hardin R. Runnels | December 21, 1857 | December 21, 1859 | Democratic | Francis R. Lubbock | 1 | ||
7 | Sam Houston | December 21, 1859 | March 18, 1861 | Independent | Edward Clark | [18] | 1/2 | |
8 | Edward Clark | March 18, 1861 | November 7, 1861 | Democratic | Vacant | [17] | 1/2 | |
9 | Francis R. Lubbock | November 7, 1861 | November 5, 1863 | Democratic | John McClannahan Crockett | 1 | ||
10 | Pendleton Murrah | November 5, 1863 | June 17, 1865 | Democratic | Fletcher Summerfield Stockdale | [19] | 1/3 | |
10 Interim |
Fletcher Summerfield Stockdale | June 11, 1865 | June 16, 1865 | Military | Vacant | [20] | 1/3 | |
11 | Andrew J. Hamilton | June 17, 1865 | August 9, 1866 | Democratic-Military | Vacant | [21] | 1/3 | |
12 | James W. Throckmorton | August 9, 1866 | August 8, 1867 | Democratic | George Washington Jones | [22] | 1/2 | |
13 | Elisha M. Pease | June 8, 1867 | September 30, 1869 | Republican | Vacant | [22][23] | 1/2 | |
14 | Edmund J. Davis | January 8, 1870 | January 15, 1874 | Republican | Vacant | [24] | 1 | |
15 | Richard Coke | January 15, 1874 | December 21, 1876 | Democratic | Richard Bennett Hubbard, Jr. | [25] | 1 1/2 | |
16 | Richard B. Hubbard | December 21, 1876 | January 21, 1879 | Democratic | Vacant | [17] | 1/2 | |
17 | Oran M. Roberts | January 21, 1879 | January 16, 1883 | Democratic | Joseph Draper Sayers (1879–81) | 2 | ||
Leonidas Jefferson Storey (1881–83) | ||||||||
18 | John Ireland | January 16, 1883 | January 20, 1887 | Democratic | Francis Marion Martin (1883–85) | 2 | ||
Barnett Gibbs (1885–87) | ||||||||
19 | Lawrence Sullivan Ross | January 18, 1887 | January 20, 1891 | Democratic | Thomas Benton Wheeler | 2 | ||
20 | James Stephen Hogg | January 20, 1891 | January 15, 1895 | Democratic | George Cassety Pendleton (1891–93) | 2 | ||
Martin McNulty Crane (1893–95) | ||||||||
21 | Charles A. Culberson | January 15, 1895 | January 17, 1899 | Democratic | George Taylor Jester | 2 | ||
22 | Joseph D. Sayers | January 17, 1899 | January 20, 1903 | Democratic | James Nathan Browning | 2 | ||
23 | S. W. T. Lanham | January 20, 1903 | January 15, 1907 | Democratic | George D. Neal | 2 | ||
24 | Thomas Mitchell Campbell | January 15, 1907 | January 17, 1911 | Democratic | Asbury Bascom Davidson | 2 | ||
25 | Oscar Branch Colquitt | January 17, 1911 | January 19, 1915 | Democratic | Asbury Bascom Davidson (1911–13) | 2 | ||
William Harding Mayes (1913–15) | ||||||||
26 | James E. "Pa" Ferguson | January 19, 1915 | August 25, 1917 | Democratic | William Pettus Hobby, Sr. | [26] | 1 1/2 | |
27 | William P. Hobby | August 25, 1917 | January 18, 1921 | Democratic | Vacant (1917–19) | [27] | 1 1/2 | |
Willard Arnold Johnson (1919–21) | ||||||||
28 | Pat Morris Neff | January 18, 1921 | January 20, 1925 | Democratic | Lynch Davidson (1921–23) | 2 | ||
Thomas Whitfield Davidson (1923–25) | ||||||||
29 | Miriam A. "Ma" Ferguson | January 20, 1925 | January 17, 1927 | Democratic | Barry Miller | 1 | ||
30 | Dan Moody | January 17, 1927 | January 20, 1931 | Democratic | 2 | |||
31 | Ross S. Sterling | January 20, 1931 | January 17, 1933 | Democratic | Edgar E. Witt | 1 | ||
32 | Miriam A. "Ma" Ferguson | January 17, 1933 | January 15, 1935 | Democratic | 1 | |||
33 | James V. Allred | January 15, 1935 | January 17, 1939 | Democratic | Walter Frank Woodul | 2 | ||
34 | W. Lee O'Daniel | January 17, 1939 | August 4, 1941 | Democratic | Coke R. Stevenson | [28] | 1 1/2 | |
35 | Coke R. Stevenson | August 4, 1941 | January 21, 1947 | Democratic | Vacant (1941–43) | [27] | 2 1/2 | |
John Lee Smith (1943–47) | ||||||||
36 | Beauford H. Jester | January 21, 1947 | July 11, 1949 | Democratic | Allan Shivers | [29] | 1/2 | |
37 | Allan Shivers | July 11, 1949 | January 15, 1957 | Democratic | Vacant (1949–51) | [27] | 3 1/2 | |
Ben Ramsey (1951–61) | ||||||||
38 | Price Daniel | January 15, 1957 | January 15, 1963 | Democratic | Ben Ramsey (1951–61) | 3 | ||
Vacant (1961–63) | ||||||||
39 | John Connally | January 15, 1963 | January 21, 1969 | Democratic | Preston Smith | 3 | ||
40 | Preston Smith | January 21, 1969 | January 16, 1973 | Democratic | Ben Barnes | 2 | ||
41 | Dolph Briscoe | January 16, 1973 | January 16, 1979 | Democratic | William P. Hobby, Jr. | 2 | ||
42 | Bill Clements | January 16, 1979 | January 18, 1983 | Republican | 1 | |||
43 | Mark White | January 18, 1983 | January 20, 1987 | Democratic | 1 | |||
44 | Bill Clements | January 20, 1987 | January 15, 1991 | Republican | 1 | |||
45 | Ann Richards | January 15, 1991 | January 17, 1995 | Democratic | Bob Bullock | 1 | ||
46 | George W. Bush | January 17, 1995 | December 21, 2000 | Republican | Bob Bullock (1995–99) | [30] | 1 1/2 | |
Rick Perry (1999–2000) | ||||||||
47 | Rick Perry | December 21, 2000 | January 20, 2015 | Republican | Bill Ratliff (2000–03) | 3 1/2 | ||
David Dewhurst (2003–15) | ||||||||
48 | Greg Abbott | January 20, 2015 | Incumbent | Republican | Dan Patrick | 1[27][31] |
Other high offices held
Living former U.S. governors of Texas
As of May 2015, there are three former U.S. governors of Texas who are currently living at this time, the oldest being Mark White (served 1983–1987, born 1940). The most recent death of a former U.S. governor of Texas was that of Bill Clements (served 1979–1983 and 1987–1991, born 1917), on May 29, 2011. The most recent U.S. governor of Texas to serve who has died is Ann Richards (served 1991–1995, born 1933), who died on September 13, 2006.
Governor | Gubernatorial term | Date of birth (and age) |
---|---|---|
Mark White | 1983–1987 | March 17, 1940 |
George W. Bush | 1995–2000 | July 6, 1946 |
Rick Perry | 2000–2015 | March 4, 1950 |
Gubernatorial trivia
Background
Texas has had two female governors: Miriam A. "Ma" Ferguson and Ann Richards. Ferguson was one of the first two women elected governor of a U.S. state (on November 4, 1924), along with Nellie Tayloe Ross of Wyoming. Ross was inaugurated on January 5, 1925, while Ferguson was inaugurated on January 20, so Ross is considered the first female state governor. Ferguson was the wife of former governor Jim "Pa" Ferguson, while Richards was elected "in her own right," being neither the spouse nor widow of a governor.
Texas governors have been born in fourteen states: Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia.
Baylor University is the most common alma mater of Texas governors, with five of them - Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Pat Morris Neff, Price Daniel, Mark White, and Ann Richards - considered alumni (though Ross attended but never completed a degree). To date, Coke Stevenson is the most recent governor who never attended college, and Bill Clements is the most recent who attended college but did not graduate.
Elections
Three governors have served non-consecutive terms: Elisha M. Pease, Miriam A. Ferguson, and Bill Clements. As was the case in most Southern states, Texas elected no Republican governors from the end of Reconstruction until the late twentieth century. Bill Clements was the state's first Republican governor since Edmund J. Davis left office in 1874, 105 years earlier. Dolph Briscoe was the last governor to be elected to a two-year term, in 1972; he was also the first to be elected to a four-year term, in 1974, since the post-Reconstruction period when two-year terms had first been established. Rick Perry, who ascended to the governorship on December 21, 2000 upon the resignation of then-Governor George W. Bush, won full four-year terms in 2002, 2006 and 2010.
Texas governors in popular culture
W. Lee "Pappy" O'Daniel served as the inspiration for the fictional, but similarly named Mississippi Governor Menelaus "Pappy" O'Daniel in the film O Brother, Where Art Thou?.
Ann Richards had a cameo appearance on an episode of the animated comedy series King of the Hill, in which she has a brief romance with Bill Dauterive after he takes the fall for mooning her in the elevator of an Austin hotel (Hank actually mooned her because he thought his friends were going to be mooning the people in the elevator but they set him up).
See also
- List of Texas Governors and Presidents
- List of Presidents of the Republic of Texas
- List of Lieutenant Governors of Texas
Notes
- ↑ "CSG Releases 2013 Governor Salaries". The Council of State Governments. June 25, 2013. Retrieved November 23, 2014.
- ↑ Upon recommendation of the Board of Pardons and Paroles
- 1 2 Suellentrop, Chip (2000-01-05). "Is George W. Bush a "Weak" Governor?". Slate Magazine - Explainer. Retrieved 2010-01-25.
- 1 2 Ivins, Molly; Lou Dubose (2000). Shrub: The Short But Happy Political Life of George W. Bush. New York: Vintage Books. pp. xii–xiii. ISBN 0-375-75714-7.
- ↑ 1845 Const. Art V sec 4
- ↑ 1861 Const. art V sec 12
- ↑ 1866 Const. art V sec 4
- ↑ 1869 Const. Art IV sec 4
- ↑ Executive Branch retrieved 23-October-2008
- ↑ TX Const. Art IV sec 4
- ↑ Texas Politics - The Executive Branch. Texaspolitics.laits.utexas.edu. Retrieved on 2013-07-15.
- ↑ TX Const. art IV sec 16 graf d
- ↑ Under the 1861 constitution, law provided that the lieutenant governor would be "styled Governor of the State of Texas" in case of vacancy.
- ↑ 1861 Const art V sec 12
- ↑ The fractional terms of some governors are not to be absolutely literally; rather, they are meant to show single terms during which multiple governors served, due to resignations, deaths and the like.
- ↑ Resigned to take an elected seat in the U.S. House of Representatives.
- 1 2 3 As lieutenant governor, filled unexpired term.
- ↑ Evicted from office due to his refusal to swear an oath to the Confederate States of America.
- ↑ Fled Austin as it fell to Union forces.
- ↑ NGA says he was Lt. Gov who served as Gov after Murrah fled Texas.
- ↑ Provisional military governor.
- 1 2 James Throckmorton was removed from office by General Philip Sheridan, and Elisha Pease installed in his place.
- ↑ Resigned due to disagreements with General Joseph Reynolds.
- ↑ Elected in a special election held under military direction.
- ↑ Resigned to take an elected seat in the U.S. Senate.
- ↑ Resigned due to the legislature bringing impeachment proceedings against him.
- 1 2 3 4 As lieutenant governor, filled unexpired term, and was subsequently elected in their own right.
- ↑ Resigned after winning the Democratic primary for a U.S. Senate seat; he won the election.
- ↑ Died in office.
- ↑ Resigned to be President of the United States.
- ↑ Governor Abbott's first term expires on January 15, 2019; he is not term limited.
References
- General
- Legislative Reference Library of Texas -- Governors of Texas
- Governor (of Texas) from the Handbook of Texas Online
- The Handbook of Texas Online: Texas History Quiz -- Presidents and Governors of Texas
- Explanation of the strengths of governors
- Constitutions
- 1876 Constitution, as amended (Current)
- 1876 Constitution
- 1869 Constitution
- 1866 Constitution
- 1861 Constitution
- 1845 Constitution
- Specific
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