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Simon P. Hughes
Born: April 14, 1830, near Carthage, Tennessee
Died: June 29, 1906, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Mount Holly Cemetery, Little Rock
Served: 1885-1889
Arkansas's 15th governor
was born and educated in Tennessee,
where he attended Clinton College.
In 1849 Hughes moved to Arkansas and
1853 entered politics as sheriff of
Monroe County, where he served for
two years. While sheriff, Hughes studied
law, was admitted to the Arkansas bar
in 1857, and started a private practice
in Clarendon. Although a Unionist Democrat,
Hughes enlisted in the Confederate
army and was commissioned as a captain,
rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel...
He was a delegate to the 1874 Arkansas
Constitutional Convention, and Arkansas'
attorney general from 1874 to 1877.
In 1884 Hughes was elected Governor
and was re-elected to a second term
in 1886. During his administration,
the Arkansas Industrial University
was reorganized, the office of state
geologist was created, and public executions
were abolished. The State Debt Board
was formed to help reduce the state’s
indebtedness without impairing its
ability to conduct business and meet
its current bills. Additionally, limitations
were imposed on the sale of intoxicants
within three miles of any school. Hughes
stood for a third term but was narrowly
defeated in the primary. After leaving
office in 1889 he was elected to the
Arkansas Supreme Court as an associate
justice and re-elected in 1896. He
served nearly 16 years on the bench.
He died in Little Rock and is buried
at the Mount Holly Cemetery, Little
Rock, Arkansas.
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James Philip Eagle
Born: August 10 1837, in Maurin County, Tennessee
Died: December 20, 1904, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Mount Holly Cemetery, Little Rock
Served: 1889-1893
Born in Tennessee, James Eagle’s family moved to Pulaski County in 1839.
Eagle was educated in the county schools, farmed and in 1859 was appointed
deputy sheriff of Prairie County. Eagle held this position until the start
of the Civil War, when he enlisted as a private, and rose later to the rank
of colonel. After the war, Eagle farmed, was ordained a Baptist minister and
briefly attended Mississippi College. He entered politics as a member of the
Arkansas Legislature, serving from 1873 to 1878, and in 1885, he served as
speaker of the house. He also served as president of the Arkansas Baptist Convention
from 1880 to 1904. Eagle was nominated by the Democratic State Convention for
governor in 1888, and was elected, although charges of fraud clouded his victory.
During his first term Eagle advocated more equitable taxation, effective railroad
regulation, penitentiary reforms and generous support for education. Re-elected
in 1890, Eagle continued to support these measures and signed into law Arkansas’s “separate
coach act,” which mandated segregated traveling accommodations for white
and black passengers. After leaving office, Eagle continued his long work with
the Southern Baptist churches, retiring from the presidencies of the Arkansas
Baptist and Southern Baptist Conventions in 1904. He also sat on the capital
commission but was fired by Governor Jeff Davis, after being charged with campaigning
for one of the governor's opponents. He died of heart failure in late 1904,
in Little Rock.
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William Meade Fishback
Born: November 5, 1831, at Jeffersonton, Virginia
Died: February 9, 1903, at Fort Smith, Arkansas
Buried: Oak Cemetery, Fort Smith
Served: 1893-1895
William Fishback graduated
from the University of Virginia in
1855, studied law, and then moved to
Illinois where he was admitted to the
bar in 1857. After a year of practicing
law Fishback relocated to Greenwood,
Arkansas, and entered into a partnership
with Judge Solomon F. Clark. In 1861
he was elected as a Union sympathizer
to the state convention yet voted for
the secession ordinance (so, go figure!).
After secession Fishback left the state,
returning in 1863 to establish a Unionist
newspaper and, later, recruit about
900 men for the Fourth Arkansas Cavalry.
He entered politics in 1864, when he
was elected to the U.S. Senate, but
was not allowed to take his seat, along
with several other representatives
from ex-Confederate states. Fishback
was a delegate to the 1874 Arkansas
Constitutional Convention, and was
a member of the Arkansas Legislature
from 1871 to 1881. He introduced what
is known as the "Fishback Amendment" to
the state constitution, which prohibited
the state authorities from paying on
much of its bonded indebtedness, including
the so-called “Holford” bonds,
as well as Reconstruction-period railroad
aid and levee bonds. For this advocacy,
Fishback won (and bore proudly) the
sobriquet of “the great repudiator.” On
September 5, 1892, he was elected Arkansas's
17th governor, and during his tenure,
the St. Francis levee district was
organized. As governor, Fishback did
little to guide the Legislature, but
instead sought to enhance the national
image of Arkansas with the state’s
acclaimed pavilion at the Columbian
Exposition of 1893 and other similar
public relations activities. He left
office in January 1895, and continued
his work in promoting Arkansas's industrial
growth while practicing law in Fort
Smith until his death in 1903.
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James Paul Clarke
Born: August 19, 1854, in Yazoo County, Mississippi
Died: October 1, 1916, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Oakland Cemetery, Little Rock
Served: 1895-1897
Arkansas’s 18th
governor graduated from the University
of Virginia in 1878 with a degree in
law. He moved to Arkansas in 1879,
and started a successful practice in
Helena. He was elected to the Arkansas
House of Representatives in 1886, the
State Senate in 1888 and successfully
sought the office of Attorney-General
in 1892 and the governorship in 1894.
During his tenure, Clarke advocated
four-year terms for state and county
offices, quadrennial instead of biennial
sessions for the general assembly,
and a constitutional provision for
a tax on franchises; however, the legislature
did not pass any of these bills. Clarke
met with more success in supporting
railroad rate regulation and in negotiating
an agreement with the federal government
over debts owed it by the state of
Arkansas. In addition, while known
for having a volatile and sometimes
violent temper, he crusaded to prevent
prizefighting in Arkansas, threatening
to use the militia to stop such events.
Clarke did not seek re-election, but
instead ran unsuccessfully for the
U.S. Senate in 1896. He ran again in
1902, and this time he was elected.
Clarke won re-election in 1908, and
again in 1914; he was known for his
independent streak and his frequent
support of progressive legislation,
often at odds with the Democratic leadership.
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Daniel Webster Jones
Born: December 15, 1839, in Bowie County, Texas
Died: December 25 1918, in Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Oaklawn Cemetery, Little Rock
Served: 1897-1901
Arkansas's 19th governor
was born in Texas but in 1840 his family
moved to Washington, Arkansas, where
Jones attended Washington Academy and
later studied law. During the Civil
War, Jones enlisted in the Third Arkansas
(Confederate) Infantry, was wounded
in battle, became a prisoner of war,
and later rose to the rank of colonel.
Jones finished his law studies and
was admitted to the Arkansas Bar in
1865; in the next year he was named
prosecuting attorney for Hempstead
County. Jones was elected prosecuting
attorney of the Ninth Judicial Circuit
in 1874, attorney general in 1884 and
1886, and Pulaski County’s representative
in the Arkansas House of Representatives
in 1890. In September 1896 he was elected
governor. In his first term Jones supported
electoral reforms, creation of a state
railroad commission and construction
of a separate juvenile reform school,
among other measures; in most instances,
the legislature’s enactments
fell short of Jones’s suggestions.
He was re-elected to a second term
in 1898. During his second term money
was appropriated for a new state capitol,
voters approved a constitutional amendment
creating a state railroad commission
and the legislature enacted a state-level
anti-trust act. After leaving office,
Jones resumed his law practice in Little
Rock and was elected in 1914 to the
Arkansas House of Representatives. |
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