List of Governors of Nebraska
The following is a list of the governors of the U.S. Territory and later State of Nebraska.
Governor of Nebraska | |
---|---|
Seal of Nebraska | |
Style | The Honorable |
Inaugural holder |
David Butler 1867 |
Formation | Constitution of Nebraska |
Salary | $105,000 (2013)[1] |
- Prior to becoming a territory, Nebraska Territory was part of Louisiana Territory (renamed Missouri Territory) from 1805 to 1821; see List of Governors of Missouri for this period. Between 1821 and 1854, the land was unorganized territory.
Territorial governors
Appointed, before statehood, to a four-year term by the President of the United States.[upper-alpha 1]
The Democratic Party and its allies elected Presidents Franklin Pierce (March 4, 1853, to March 3, 1857) and James Buchanan (March 4, 1857, to March 3, 1861). The Republican Party and its allies elected Presidents Abraham Lincoln (March 4, 1861, to April 15, 1865) and Andrew Johnson (April 15, 1865, to March 3, 1869), as well as a majority of the Senators and Representatives to the Congresses after 1860 that admitted Nebraska into the Union of states.
- Parties
# | Picture | Governor (Birth–Death) | Party | Took office | Left office | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
William Walker (1800–1874) |
July 23, 1853 | October 16, 1854 | Not recognized by the federal government | ||||
1 | Francis Burt (1807–1854) |
Democratic | October 16, 1854 | October 18, 1854 | Died | ||
Thomas B. Cuming (1827–1858) |
Democratic | October 18, 1854 | February 23, 1855 | Acting | |||
2 | Mark W. Izard (1799–1866) |
Democratic | February 23, 1855 | October 25, 1857 | Resigned | ||
Thomas B. Cuming (1827–1858) |
Democratic | October 25, 1857 | January 12, 1858 | Acting | |||
3 | William A. Richardson (1811–1875) |
Democratic | January 12, 1858 | December 5, 1858 | Resigned | ||
J. Sterling Morton (1832–1902) |
Democratic | December 5, 1858 | May 2, 1859 | Acting | |||
4 | Samuel W. Black (1816–1862) |
Democratic | May 2, 1859 | February 24, 1861 | Resigned | ||
J. Sterling Morton (1832–1902) |
Democratic | February 24, 1861 | March 6, 1861 | Acting | |||
Algernon S. Paddock (1830–1897) |
Republican | March 6, 1861 | May 15, 1861 | Acting | |||
5 | Alvin Saunders (1817–1899) |
Republican | May 15, 1861 | March 1, 1867 |
State governors
Popularly elected, beginning in 1866, to a two-year term. In 1962, the voters approved a constitutional amendment expanding terms beginning in 1966 to four years. In 1966, the voters limited the number of consecutive full terms that any one governor could serve to two (i.e. only one possible re-election while still in office after election to a full term.)[upper-alpha 2]
- Parties
Republican Democratic Fusion (Democratic/Populist)
# | Portrait | Governor (Birth–Death) | Party | Took office | Left office | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | David Butler (1829–1891) |
Republican | February 21, 1867 | June 2, 1871 | [2] | ||
William H. James (1831–1920) |
Republican | June 2, 1871 | January 13, 1873 | Secretary of State[3] | |||
2 | Robert Wilkinson Furnas (1824–1905) |
Republican | January 13, 1873 | January 11, 1875 | |||
3 | Silas Garber (1833–1905) |
Republican | January 11, 1875 | January 9, 1879 | |||
4 | Albinus Nance (1848–1911) |
Republican | January 9, 1879 | January 4, 1883 | |||
5 | James W. Dawes (1844–1918) |
Republican | January 4, 1883 | January 6, 1887 | |||
6 | John Milton Thayer (1820–1906) |
Republican | January 6, 1887 | February 8, 1892 | [4] | ||
7 | James E. Boyd (1834–1906) |
Democratic | February 8, 1892 | January 13, 1893 | [4] | ||
8 | Lorenzo Crounse (1834–1909) |
Republican | January 13, 1893 | January 3, 1895 | |||
9 | Silas A. Holcomb (1858–1920) |
Fusion (Democratic/Populist) |
January 3, 1895 | January 5, 1899 | |||
10 | William A. Poynter (1848–1909) |
Fusion (Democratic/Populist) |
January 5, 1899 | January 3, 1901 | |||
11 | Charles H. Dietrich (1853–1924) |
Republican | January 3, 1901 | May 1, 1901 | Resigned[5] | ||
12 | Ezra P. Savage (1842–1920) |
Republican | May 1, 1901 | January 8, 1903 | Lt-Gov.[6] | ||
13 | John H. Mickey (1845–1910) |
Republican | January 8, 1903 | January 3, 1907 | |||
14 | George L. Sheldon (1870–1960) |
Republican | January 3, 1907 | January 7, 1909 | |||
15 | Ashton C. Shallenberger (1862–1938) |
Democratic | January 7, 1909 | January 5, 1911 | |||
16 | Chester H. Aldrich (1862–1924) |
Republican | January 5, 1911 | January 9, 1913 | |||
17 | John H. Morehead (1861–1942) |
Democratic | January 9, 1913 | January 4, 1917 | |||
18 | Keith Neville (1884–1929) |
Democratic | January 4, 1917 | January 9, 1919 | |||
19 | Samuel R. McKelvie (1881–1956) |
Republican | January 9, 1919 | January 3, 1923 | |||
20 | Charles W. Bryan (1867–1945) |
Democratic | January 3, 1923 | January 8, 1925 | |||
21 | Adam McMullen (1872–1959) |
Republican | January 8, 1925 | January 3, 1929 | |||
22 | Arthur J. Weaver (1873–1945) |
Republican | January 3, 1929 | January 8, 1931 | |||
23 | Charles W. Bryan (1867–1945) |
Democratic | January 8, 1931 | January 3, 1935 | |||
24 | Robert Leroy Cochran (1886–1963) |
Democratic | January 3, 1935 | January 9, 1941 | |||
25 | Dwight Griswold (1893–1954) |
Republican | January 9, 1941 | January 9, 1947 | |||
26 | Val Peterson (1903–1983) |
Republican | January 9, 1947 | January 8, 1953 | |||
27 | Robert B. Crosby (1911–2000) |
Republican | January 8, 1953 | January 6, 1955 | |||
28 | Victor E. Anderson (1902–1962) |
Republican | January 6, 1955 | January 8, 1959 | |||
29 | Ralph G. Brooks (1898–1960) |
Democratic | January 8, 1959 | September 9, 1960 | Died.[7] | ||
30 | Dwight W. Burney (1892–1987) |
Republican | September 9, 1960 | January 5, 1961 | Lt-Gov.[6] | ||
31 | Frank B. Morrison (1905–2004) |
Democratic | January 5, 1961 | January 5, 1967 | |||
32 | Norbert T. Tiemann (1924–2012) |
Republican | January 5, 1967 | January 7, 1971 | |||
33 | J. James Exon (1921–2005) |
Democratic | January 7, 1971 | January 4, 1979 | |||
34 | Charles Thone (1924–) |
Republican | January 4, 1979 | January 6, 1983 | |||
35 | J. Robert Kerrey (1943–) |
Democratic | January 6, 1983 | January 9, 1987 | |||
36 | Kay A. Orr (1939–) |
Republican | January 9, 1987 | January 9, 1991 | [8] | ||
37 | Ben Nelson (1941–) |
Democratic | January 9, 1991 | January 7, 1999 | |||
38 | Mike Johanns (1950–) |
Republican | January 7, 1999 | January 20, 2005 | Resigned[9] | ||
39 | Dave Heineman (1948–) |
Republican | January 20, 2005 | January 8, 2015 | Lt-Gov.[10] | ||
40 | Pete Ricketts (1964–) |
Republican | January 8, 2015 | Incumbent |
Notes
- ↑ "CSG Releases 2013 Governor Salaries". The Council of State Governments. June 25, 2013. Retrieved November 23, 2014.
- ↑ Elected, but not inaugurated, before Nebraska's statehood. Impeached and removed from office for misappropriation of state funds; the impeachment was expunged six years later.
- ↑ As state secretary of state, acted as governor for unexpired term.
- 1 2 James Boyd won the 1890 election, and was sworn in on January 8, 1891. However, due to a question of his U.S. citizenship and eligibility for the office, he did not take office until February 8, 1892.
- ↑ Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States Senate.
- 1 2 As lieutenant governor, became governor for unexpired term.
- ↑ Died in office.
- ↑ First and (as of June 2016) only female governor of Nebraska
- ↑ Resigned to become United States Secretary of Agriculture.
- ↑ As lieutenant governor, succeeded to the office of governor for Johann's unexpired term, and was later elected in his own right.
Other high offices held
This is a table of other governorships, congressional seats and other national public offices held by governors of Nebraska. All representatives and senators mentioned represented Nebraska except where noted.
- * denotes those offices which the governor resigned to take.
- p. = Political Party; D = Democrat ; R = Republican;
- the footnotes [P 1], etc., indicate the presidential administration(s) under which an unelected Federal office was held (see Appointing presidents below the table).
Appointing presidents
- ↑ Grover Cleveland (D, 1893-1897)
- ↑ Ulysses Grant (R, 1869-1877) and Rutherford B. Hayes (R, 1877-1881)
- ↑ Franklin Roosevelt (D, 1933-45) and Harry Truman (D, 1945-53)
- ↑ Dwight Eisenhower (R, 1953-1961)
- ↑ Richard Nixon (R, 1969-1974)
- ↑ George W. Bush (R, 2001-2009)
Living former U.S. governors of Nebraska
As of May 2015, six former U.S. governors of Nebraska were still living. The oldest of these was Charles Thone (born 1924; served 1979–1983). Most recently dead was Norbert T. Tiemann (born 1924; served 1967–1971), on June 19, 2012. The most recently serving U.S. governor of Nebraska to die was J. James Exon (born 1921; served 1971–1979), on June 10, 2005.
Name | Gubernatorial term | Date of birth (and age) |
---|---|---|
Charles Thone | 1979–1983 | January 4, 1924 |
Bob Kerrey | 1983–1987 | August 27, 1943 |
Kay A. Orr | 1987–1991 | January 2, 1939 |
Ben Nelson | 1991–1999 | May 17, 1941 |
Mike Johanns | 1999–2005 | June 18, 1950 |
Dave Heineman | 2005–2015 | May 12, 1948 |
See also
- List of Lieutenant Governors of Nebraska
- Governors of Nebraska Territory
- United States congressional delegations from Nebraska
- Political party strength in Nebraska
References
- ↑ 2012-13 Nebraska Blue Book (Nebraska State Government), page 418
- ↑ 2012-13 Nebraska Blue Book, pages 418–419
- ↑ Nebraska Governor Robert Leroy (Roy) Cochran at the National Governors Association web site, retrieved May 27, 2013.
External links
- Semi-Centennial History of Nebraska (1904)
- Nebraska Blue Book
- specifically (in the 2012-13 Blue Book), State Executive Branch (PDF), page 421, "Nebraska Governors, 1854–2013"