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PAST GOVERNORS OF OKLA DATES OF SERVICE |
Charles Nathaniel Haskell 1907-1911 D
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Lee Cruce 1911-1915 D
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Robert Lee Williams 1915-1919 D
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James B A Robertson
1919-1923 D
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James Callaway Walton 1923-1923 D
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Martin Edwin Trapp 1926-1927 D
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Henry S Johnston 1927-1929 D
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William J Holloway 1929-1931 D
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William H Murray "Alfalfa Bill" 1931-1935 D
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Ernest W Marland 1935-1939 D
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Leon Chase Phillips 1939-1943 D
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Robert Samuel Kerr 1943-1947 D
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Roy Joseph Turner 1947-1951 D
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Johnston Murray 1951-1955 D
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Raymond Dancel Gary 1955-1959 D
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James H Edmondson 1959-1963 D
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George P Nigh 9 days 1963 D
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Henry Louis Bellmon 1963-1967 R
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Dewey F Bartlett 1967-1971 R
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David Hall 1971-1975 D
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David Lyle Boren 1975-1979 D
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George P Nigh 1979-1987 D
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Henry Louis Bellmon
Second Term
1987-1991 R
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David Lee Walters 1991-1995 D
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Francis A Keating 1995-2003 R
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Brad Henry 2003-Present D
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PAST OKLAHOMA GOVERNORS
AND DATES OF SERVICE Statehood 1907 - 2003
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Charles Nathaniel Haskell
Served 1907 - 1911 Democrat
Oklahoma's first State Governor was born March 13, 1860, in West Leipsic, Putman County, Ohio, the son of George Richardson Haskell and Jane Reeves Haskell. He was educated as a lawyer and was admitted to the Ohio Bar in 1881 where he began practice in Ottawa, Putman County, Ohio. He married Lucy Violatra Pomeroy October ll, 1881 in Ottawa, Putman County, Ohio. He married second Lillian Elizabeth Gallup September 4, 1889 in Ottawa. In 1910, he moved to Muskogee, Indian Territory, where he added to his law practice the promotion of railroads. He was a leader in the Oklahoma Constitutional Convention in 1906. After his term as Governor,
from November 16, 1907 to January 9, 1911, he engaged in the oil business. He died July 5, 1933 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma and is buried in the Green Hill Cemetery, Muskogee, Muskogee County, Oklahoma.
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Lee Cruce
Served 1911 - 1915 Democrat
Oklahoma's second govenor was born July 8,1863, at Lily Dale, near Marion, Crittenden County, Kentucky, the son of James Wenlock Cruce and Jane Hill Cruce He was admitted to the Kentucky Bar in 1887, and begain practice in 1891 when he joined his older brother's law firm located in Ardmore, Indian Territory. Ten years later he became cashier of the Ardmore National Bank. In time he advanced to be its president.
He married Chickie LaFlore on June 21, 1893 in Ardmore, Pickins County, Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory now Ardemore, Carter County, Oklahoma. They had a daughter Lorena Jane Cruce born June 19, 1895
He served as Oklahoma's second Governor from January 9, 1911, to January
11, 1915. In 1930, he was defeated in the primary for the United States
Senate. He died on January 16, 1933, in Los Angeles, California and is buried at the Rose Hill Cemetery, Ardmore, Carter, Oklahoma.
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Robert Lee Williams
Served 1915 - 1919 Democrat
Oklahoma's third Governor was born December 20, 1868, at Brundidge,Pike,Alabama. He earned a number of college degrees including LL.D., was admitted to the Alabama Bar in 1891, and began his practice in Troy, Pike, Alabama. In 1896, he went to Atoka, Indian Territory. His long years of public service included: Member of the Constitutional Convention, 1906-1907; Chief Justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court, 1907-1914; Governor of Oklahoma, January 11, 1915 to January 13, 1919; United States District Judge; Eastern District of Oklahoma, 1919 to 1937; United States Circuit Judge, Tenth Circuit, 1937-1939. He retired in 1939, but continued to serve as needed. He died at his home in Durant,Bryan County, Oklahoma, April 10, 1948.
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James Brooks Ayers Robertson
Served 1919 - 1923 Democrat
Born March 15, 1871, in Keokuk County, Iowa, and was educated in the public schools. In 1893, he moved to Oklahoma and was admitted to the Oklahoma Bar in 1898. He held the following political offices; Lincoln County Attorney, 1900-1902; Judge of the Tenth Judicial District Of Oklahoma, 1909-1910; Member of the State Capitol Commission, 1911; Member of the Supreme Court Commission, 1911-1914; Governor of Oklahoma, January 13, 1919 to January 8, 1923; Democratic Presidential Elector-at-Large, 1932. He died at his home in Oklahoma City,Oklahoma County, Oklahoma March 7, 1938. |
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Jack Callaway Walton
Served 1923 -1923 Democrat
Only served from January 1923 to November 1923, when he was impeached. Born March 6, 1881, on a farm near Indianapolis, Indiana. After a ten-year stay in Lincoln, Nebraska, he joined the Army in 1897. Although he saw no foreign service during the Spanish-American War, he did live in Mexico before coming to Oklahoma City in 1903, as a sales engineer. He was Commissioner of Public Works in 1917; Mayor of Oklahoma City, 1919-1923; elected Governor in 1922; and was impeached within the year, serving from January 8, to November 19, 1923; served in the State Corporation Commission from 1932 until 1939, when he retired to enter private law practice. He died November 25, 1949, and is buried in the Rose Hill Cemetery in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma. |
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Martin Edwin Trapp
Served 1926 - 1927 Democrat
Born April 18, 1887, in Robinson, Kansas, he was educated almost entirely
by association and study with Mr. McDaniel, a neighbor. He served as
County Clerk of Logan County, 1905-1907; State Auditor, 1907-1911; Lieutenant
Governor, 1915-1927. After the impeachment of Gov. Walton, he served
as Governor of the State from November 19, 1923, until January 10, 1927.
Following this, he was a dealer in investment securities until his death
July 26, 1951, in Oklahoma City. |
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Henry Simpson Johnston
Served 1927 -1929 Democrat
Only served from January 1927 to March 20, 1929, when he was impeached. Born December 20, 1867, near Evansville, Indiana, he migrated to Colorado at the age of twenty-four where he studied law and was admitted to the Colorado Bar in 1891. Later he came to Perry, Oklahoma, to practice. He was a member, and temporary presiding officer of the Constitutional Convention in 1906. He was elected Governor in
1926 and took office January 10, 1927. Later impeached, he maintained a law practice in his home town of Perry until his death January , . |
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William Judson Holloway
Served 1929 - 1931 Democrat
He succeeded Gov. Johnston in office and completed the term. He was a
native of Arkadelphia, Arkansas, born December 15, 1888. After graduation
from Ouachita College in 1910, he attended the University of Chicago
for a time. While he was living in Hugo and working as a high school principal he began to read law. He later completed his course to Cumberland University and was admitted to the practice of law at Hugo. He was elected county attorney in 1916 was a State Senator from 1920 to 1924, serving as President pro Tempore; in 1926, he was elected Lieutenant Governor and advanced to the Governor's office upon the impeachment of Gov. Johnston. He practiced law in Oklahoma City until his death January 28, 1970. |
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William Henry "Alfalfa Bill" Murray
Served 1931 - 1935 Democrat
Probably Oklahoma's most colorful political figure, William
Murray was born November 21,1869, in Collinsville, Texas. At twenty years
of age he graduated from College Hill Institute in Springtown, Texas.
For the next six years he held various jobs, including day laborer, teacher, editor of a Dallas farm magazine, and of a Corsicana daily newspaper. Admitted to the Bar in 1895, he practiced at Fort Worth before moving to Tishomingo, Indian Territory, in 1898. There he became legal advisor to the Governor of the Chickasaw Nation. He was President of the Oklahoma Constitutional Convention in 1906; Speaker of the House of Representatives,1907-1908; Member of the Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth United States Congresses; and Governor of the State from January 12, 1931, to January 15, 1935. At his urging, the Legislature created the Oklahoma Tax Commission. His ranching interests spread from Oklahoma to Bolivia, South America, where he established a colony. He wrote articles and books, mostly dealing with constitutional rights. He died October 15, 1956
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Ernest Whitworth Marland
Served 1935 - 1939 Democrat
A native of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Marland was born May 8, 1874. He
was educated at Park Institute of that city and received his LL.B. from
the University of Michigan, in 1893. He began his law practice at Pittsburgh, but engaged in the oil production business after moving to Oklahoma. He was president of the Marland Oil Company until its consolidation; Member of the Seventy-third United States Congress from 1933 to 1935; Governor of Oklahoma from January 15, 1935, to January 9, 1939. Before Marland left office, nearly 90,000 Oklahomans were working on 1,300 WPA projects. Marland provided leadership in the development of the Oklahoma Highway Patrol and the Interstate Oil Compact. He died October 3, 1941. His civic contributions to Ponca City included the Pioneer Woman Statue.
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Leon Chase Phillips
Served 1939 -1943 Democrat
Born December 9, 1890, in Worth County, Missouri, Phillips moved to Oklahoma at an early age. While a student at Epworth University in Oklahoma City, he studied for the ministry, but changed to law and received his LL.B. from the University of Oklahoma in 1916. He was admitted to the State Bar in that year and to practice before the United States Supreme Court later. After service in World War I, he returned to Okemah, where he practiced law. He was a member of the State Legislature from 1933 to 1938; Speaker of the House in 1935; Governor from January 9, 1939, to January 11, 1943. He was a practicing attorney in his home of Okemah until his death March 27, 1958. He is buried in Weleetka.
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Robert Samuel Kerr
Served 1943 - 1947 Democrat
Oklahoma's first native-born governor, was born near Ada, Indian Territory, September 11, 1896. His college work was done at East Central Normal School, and Oklahoma Baptist University. He was admitted to the Oklahoma Bar in 1922, and practiced in Ada. Beginning as a drilling contractor in 1926, he built up a large oil producing company and at the time of his death was President of the Kerr-McGee Oil Industries, Inc. He served as Governor of Oklahoma from January 13, 1943, to January 13, 1947. He was elected U.S. Senator on November 2, 1948, and served until his death January 1, 1963. While governor, Kerr's administration liquidated the state debt. During his tenure as U.S. Senator, he worked to get the McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System developed, changing much of Oklahoma's landscape. He is buried at his birthplace near Ada, Pontotoc, Oklahoma.
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Roy Joseph Turner
Served 1947 - 1951 Democrat
Turner was born November 6,1894, in Lincoln County, Oklahoma Territory. Upon completion of his high school education,he attended Hill's Business
College in Oklahoma City. He was a bookkeeper for Morris Parking Company
in Oklahoma City from 1911-1915; a salesman for the Goodyear Tire and
Rubber Company there and after his service in World War I, he was a dealer in real estate, principally in Oklahoma, Florida and Texas. By 1928,he established the Turner Ranch at Sulphur, but he maintained a residence in Oklahoma City where he served on the Board of Education from 1939 to 1946. His term as Governor of Oklahoma was from January 13, 1947, to January 8, 1951. He lived in Oklahoma City until his death June 11, 1973 and he is buried in Rose Hill Burial Park there.
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Johnston Murray
Served 1951 - 1955 Democrat
He was born July 21, 1902, in the mansion of the Chickasaw Nation's Governor at Emet, Johnston County, Indian Territory. His early education was governed by the location of the work of his famous father, former Gov. William H. Murray. After graduation from the Murray State School of Agriculture, in 1924, he went to Bolivia where he lived for four years trying to make a success of his father's colonization expedition there. He received his law degree in 1946, having studied and worked at other things for a number of years. He served as Governor from January 8, 1951,to January 1955. He served as an attorney with the State Department of Welfare until his death April 16, 1974. He is buried at Tishomingo along with his father.
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Raymond Dancel Gary
Served 1955 - 1959 Democrat
He was the first Governor to be born in Oklahoma sine statehood. His birth date was January 21, 1908, and his birthplace, a farm midway between Madill and Kingston. He was educated in the local schools and Southeastern State College. After five years of teaching he was elected County Superintendent of Schools and served for four years. In 1936, he began his business career, first in school and office supplies, later as President of the SoonerOil Company. He was a State Senator from 1941 until he became Governor January 10, 1955, for a four-year-term. He died December 11, 1993, and is buried in Madill.
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James Howard Edmondson
Served 1959 - 1963 Democrat
The youngest governor in the history of the State, Edmondson was born
in Muskogee, Oklahoma, September 27, 1925. He attended elementary and
secondary schools in that city and enrolled in the University of Oklahoma after high school graduation. He enlisted in the U.S. Air Force in March 1942, and served until December 5 ,1945. He returned to the University and completed his law degree in August, 1948. After practicing law in Muskogee, he moved to Tulsa to become the chief prosecutor in the office of the county attorney of Tulsa County. He was elected county attorney in 1954 and was re-elected in 1956. J. Howard Edmondson was inaugurated Governor of Oklahoma January 8, 1959, after having been elected to that post by the largest majority ever given a gubernatorial candidate in the state. He resigned from office of governor January 6, 1963, and was appointed to the United States Senate to fill the position left vacant by the death of Robert S. Kerr. At the time of his death on November 17, 1971, he was a practicing attorney in Oklahoma City. George Nigh served from January 6, until January 14, 1963, when Bellmon assumed office.
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Henry Louis Bellmon
Served 1963 - 1967 Republican
Served 1987 - 1991 Republican
The first Republican Governor of the State of Oklahoma was born in Tonkawa, Kay County, Oklahoma, September 3, 1921. He is the son of Goerge and Edith Caskey Bellmon. He attended Colorado State University, later transferring to Oklahoma State University where he was granted the degree of Bachelor of Science in Agriculture. Henry Bellmon served with the U.S. Marine Corps from 1942 through 1946, received the Silver Star for Action on Saipan and the Legion of Merit for action on Iwo Jima. He was a member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives in farming at Billings,Noble County, Oklahoma, at the time of his election as Governor. He served from January 14, 1963, to January 9, 1967, and was elected U.S. Senator in 1968 and again in 1974. He chose not to run in 1980. He served a second term in 1986.
He married Shirley Lee Osbourn in Billings, Noble County, Oklahoma on January 24, 1947. She was born August 10, 1927 and died in Red Rock, Noble County, Oklahoma on Jun 24, 2000. They are the parents of three children.
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Dewey Follett Bartlett
Served 1967 - 1971 Republican
The second Republican Governor of the State of Oklahoma, Bartlett was
born in Marietta, Washington, Ohio, March 28, 1919. He was the son of David A. and Jessie Follett Bartlett. He attended Princeton University where he servedin the Marine Corps during World War II as a combat dive bomber pilot. He received the Air Medal. He was a partner in Keener Oil Company, one of Oklahoma's oldest, small independent oil companies he was first elected to the State Senate in 1962 and was re-elected in 1964. He served as Governor from January 9, 1967, to January 11, 1971, and was elected to the U.S. Senate November 7, 1972.
He married Ann Chilton Smith.
He died March 1, 1979 in Tulsa, Tulsa, Oklahoma and is buried at the Calvary Cemetery, Tulsa, Tulsa, Oklahoma.
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David Hall Served 1971 - 1975 Democrat He was born
October 20, 1930 in Oklahoma City. He is the son of Mr and Mrs. William
A. "Red" Hall. He was a Phi Beta Kappa at the University of Oklahoma
where he received a bAchelor of Arts degree in 1952. David Hall served
in the U.S. Air 2 Force from 1952 to 1954. He continued his education
at the University of Tulsa ,where he received his law degree in 1959. He
served as Assistant County Attorney of Tulsa County from 1959 to 1962
and as County Attorney from 1962 to 1966. In 1968 he returned to the
University of Tulsa where he served as Professor of Law. He was inaugurated January 11, 1971, following the closest gubernatorial election in the state's history. Hall as indicted by a federal grand jury three days after leaving office. He later served 19 months of a three-year sentence for extortion and conspiracy convictions.
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David Lyle Boren Served 1975 - 1979 Democrat Served from 1975 to 1979. Boren was born in Washington D.C., April 21, 1941, the son of Lyle H. and Christine McKown Boren. He graduated from Yale University Summa Cum Laude, receiving a B.A. degree in 1963, graduated with honors with a M.A. degree from Oxford University, England in 1965, and received his J.D. degree in 1968 from the University of Oklahoma where he was class president of the College of Law. He was an outstanding law graduate and scholar and was selected as a Rhodes Scholar. In addition to his profession as an attorney, he was a Chairman of the Division of Social Sciences and professor of political science at Oklahoma Baptist University and also Company Commander of the Oklahoma Army National Guard. He was elected ot the House of Representatives in 1967 and served until his election as Governor in November, 1974. He was inaugurated January 13, 1975, and made his home in Seminole, before moving into the Governor's mansion. He is the father of two children,
Carrie Christine and David Daniel. He was elected to the U.S. Senate
in 1978, and served successive terms until he became president of the
University of Oklahoma in Norman in November 1994.
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George Patterson Nigh Served 1979 - 1987 Democrat Nigh was born in McAlester, Oklahoma June 9, 1927, son of William R. and Irene Crockett Nigh. He attended public schools in McAlester and Eastern Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College at Wilburton, Oklahoma. From Jun 1945 through September 1946, he served in the U.S. Navy. He was granted a Bachelor of Arts degree from East Central State College, Ada, Oklahoma in 1950. From 1952 to 1958, he taught at McAlester High School. George Nigh served in the House of Representatives from the Twenty-third through the twenty-sixth Oklahoma Legislatures. He was elected Lieutenant Governor, the youngest in State's history, in 1958. In 1963, Nigh became the 17th Governor in Oklahoma, filling an unexpired 9-day term following the resignation for Gov. J. Howard Edmondson. He was elected Lieutenant Governor again in 1966, 1970, and 1974. He was elected governor November 7, 1978, and was re-sworn in January 3, 1979. Nigh became the 21st Governor of Oklahoma
serving five days to fill an unexpired term following the resignation
of Governor David Boren. He began his term and was re-elected in 1982.
Nigh served as the president of the University of Central Oklahoma in
Edmond, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma before retiring.
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Henry Louis Bellmon
Second Term
Served 1987 - 1991 Republican
Bellmon was elected the first Republican Governor of the State of Oklahoma in November 1962 and was elected November 4, 1986 to his second term as Governor of Oklahoma. Bellmon is the first governor ever to be elected to that office, then elected U.S. Senator, and then elected Governor again. He chose not to run in 1990.
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David Lee Walters Served 1991 - 1995 Democrat
Born November 20, 1951, near Canute, Oklahoma, in Washita County, Walters is the son of Harold and Evelyn Walters. He graduated as valedictorian from Canute High School in 1969, and from the University of Oklahoma in 1973, with a Bachelor's degree in Industrial Engineering. In 1977, he earned a Master of Business Administration from Harvard University. Walters served as assistant and associate provost at the OU Health Sciences Center where, at age 29, he became the youngest executive officer in the university's history. He served on the Commission for the Oklahoma State Department of Health Services in 1983, and as appointed co-chairman of the Governor's 100-member Commission on Government Reform in 1984. On November 6, 1990, Walters was elected to serve as the 24th governor of Oklahoma. During Walters' term, education funding increased by approximately 30 percent, and a $350-million bond issue for higher education-the first in 25 years-
brought construction and renovation to every state college campus.
While in office Gov. Walters pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor election violation. He chose not to run for re-election in 1994. He and his wife,Rhonda, have three daughters; a son died in 1991.
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Francis Anthony Keating Served 1995 - 2003 Republican
Born in St.Louis, Missouri,February 10, 1944, Keating's family moved
to Tulsa, Oklahoma, before he was six months old. He was graduated from
Cascia Hall High School in 1962, received a B.A. in history from Georgetown University in 1966 and earned a J.D. degree from the University of Oklahoma College of Law in 1969. Keating served as an FBI agent and as an assistant district attorney in Tulsa. He later served as U.S. Attorney from Tulsa before becoming the highest ranking Oklahoman in the Reagan and Bush Administrations, serving at the Justice, Treasury and Housing and Urban Development Departments. Governor Keating's accomplishments included overseeing the largest road construction project in Oklahoma history, the first cut in the state income tax in 50 years and a dramatic decline in the welfare rolls. Governor Keating and his wife, Cathy, are the parents of three children, Carrie, Kelly, and Chip.
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Brad Henry Served 2003 - current Democrat Elected November 2002. Born 3 Apr 1963, in Shawnee, Pottawatomie, Oklahoma and graduated from Shawnee High School in 1981. Henry attended the University of Oklahoma as a President's Leadership Scholar, receiving a bachelor's degree in economics in 1985. He continued his education at the University of Oklahoma College of Law where he received a juris doctorate degree in 1988.
Henry was first elected in 1992 at the age of 29, and served in the
Oklahoma State Senate for 10 years, where he was chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and vice chairman of the Senate Economic Development Committee. He also served on the Senate Appropriations, Education, and Sunset Committees, as well as the Appropriations Subcommittee on Education.
The Governor and his family live in Shawnee where Brad established the law firm, Henry, Canavan & Hopkins, PLLC. He is a member and past President of the Pottawatomie County Bar Association, a member of the Oklahoma Bar Association, and a past member of the William J. Holloway, Jr. American Inn of Court, a legal honor society for practicing attorneys and judges.
Governor Henry is married to the former Kim Blain, also a graduate of Shawnee High and the University of Oklahoma. They have three daughters: Leah, age 13, Laynie, age 11 and Baylee, age 5 years.
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LINK TO....USGenWeb PROJECT...clickable MAP of USA
Harmon County Historical MUSEUM
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102 West Broadway
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Hollis, Oklahoma 73550
(580) 688-9545
The Past is History,
The Future a Mystery,
The Present is a Gift!
LINK TO....USGenWeb PROJECT...clickable MAP of USA
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