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Jefferson Davis
Born: May 6, 1862, near Rocky Comfort, Arkansas
Died: January 3, 1913, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Mount Holly Cemetery, Little Rock
Served: 1901-1907
Jefferson Davis, born in Sevier County and raised in Dover and Russellville,
attended the University of Arkansas and studied law at Vanderbilt University
and, ultimately, Cumberland University. He served as prosecuting attorney of
the Fifth Judicial District of Arkansas from 1892 to 1896, and he was elected
attorney general in 1898, serving until 1900. Davis was elected Arkansas's
20th governor on September 3, 1900. He was re-elected in 1902, and again in
1904, becoming the first governor to serve more than two consecutive terms.
During his administration laws were enacted for segregation on streetcars,
a reform school was established and the Arkansas History Commission was created.
Also during his tenure, public executions were prohibited, and salaries were
defined for members of the state legislature. Davis was known for his deep
opposition to convict leasing, his attempts to halt construction of a new capitol
building, his command of populist rhetoric and his ability to exploit racial
and class tensions in his own behalf. Davis was elected to the U.S. Senate
in 1906, and served there until his death in early January 1913.
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John Sebastian Little
Born: March 15, 1851, in Sebastian County, Arkansas
Died: October 29, 1916, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: City Cemetery, Greenwood, Arkansas
Served: 1907
Arkansas's 21st governor
was born in Jenny Lind, Sebastian County,
Arkansas and attended Cane Hill College
in Washington County for one term,
taught school, studied law, and was
admitted to the Arkansas bar in 1873.
Little entered politics in 1876 when
he campaigned for and won election
as prosecuting attorney of the Twelfth
Judicial Circuit, serving until 1884.
In that year he was elected to the
Arkansas House of Representatives in
1884, and two years later was elected
to serve on the bench of the Twelfth
Judicial Circuit, a position he held
until 1890. In 1894, he was elected
to the U.S. House of Representatives
and served six terms there. In 1906,
Little ran for governor. Endorsed by
outgoing governor Davis and his former
colleagues in the House of Representatives,
Little won handily at both primary
and general elections. In his inaugural
address, Little asked the Arkansas
legislature for a broad program of
action including trusts regulation,
free school textbooks, election reforms,
the suppression of vice and gambling,
as well as comprehensive programs of
levee-building and road improvement,
plus a final end to convict leasing.
Two days later, however, Little suffered
a near-total mental and physical collapse.
During his extended recuperation at
his home in Greenwood and on the Texas
gulf coast, Senate president John I.
Moore initially served as acting governor;
after the adjournment of the Assembly
May 1907 Moore was replaced in this
capacity by incoming Senate President
pro tempore X.O. Pindall. Governor
Little never recovered his health,
although he spent time at hospitals
in Texas and Missouri. He died in 1916
in the Arkansas State Hospital for
Nervous Diseases.
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George Washington Donaghey
Born: July 1 1856, at Oakland, Louisiana
Died: December 15, 1937, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Roselawn Memorial Park, Little Rock
Served: 1909-1913
Arkansas's 22nd governor was born in northern Louisiana but was brought to
Arkansas at an early age. He briefly attended the University of Arkansas, taught
school, was a carpenter, and studied architecture and structural engineering,
becoming proficient in both. By the mid-1890s, Donaghey had become a successful
building and railroad contractor. In 1899, Donaghey was named to the newly-formed
Arkansas Capitol Commission. Construction began under Donaghey’s direction
that summer; he was removed from the commission in 1901 but in 1903 served
briefly as foreman for the project. In 1908 Donaghey successfully ran for governor
on a progressive platform which included his promise to complete the Capitol,
unfinished due to financial and political obstacles; he was re-elected in 1910.
As governor, Donaghey strove to improve public health, education, roads, and
railways and in 1911 presided over the inaugural legislative session to be
held in the new state capitol. The Booneville Tuberculosis Sanitarium was created,
as well as four agricultural high schools that later developed into Arkansas
Tech, Arkansas State, Southern State, and the University of Arkansas at Monticello.
In 1910 Donaghey campaigned alongside William Jennings Bryan throughout the
state urging voters to approve Amendment 10, an authorizing adoption of the
initiative and referendum. His greatest achievement was the termination of
the convict-lease system; Donaghey accomplished this in December 1912 by pardoning
360 inmates, nearly half of the penitentiary population, thus ruining the value
of the leases. After leaving office Donaghey returned to construction and property
management but also served on public and charitable commissions for more than
two decades, leaving at his death a great legacy of public service.
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Joseph Taylor Robinson
Born: August 26 1872, near Lonoke, Arkansas
Died: July 14 1937, at Washington, D.C.
Buried: Roselawn Memorial Park, Little Rock
Served: 1913
Joseph T. Robinson attended
the University of Arkansas and earned
a law degree from the University of
Virginia in 1895. Robinson elected
to the Arkansas House in 1894; he served
one term, and then returned to Lonoke
to practice law. In 1902 Robinson won
election to the U.S. Congress from
Arkansas’s Sixth Congressional
District, and served until 1913. Nominated
and winning election for governor in
1912, Robinson resigned his seat in
Congress on January 14, 1913. He was
inaugurated governor on January 16,
1913. On January 28, 1913, Robinson
was elected to the U.S. Senate and
continued to hold the governor's office
until March 8, 1913, when he officially
resigned. During his short term as
governor, appropriations were granted
to complete the state capitol, a state
banking department was created, and
a bureau of labor statistics was established.
Also, the state flag was adopted, and
a highway commission was created within
the state land department. Robinson
had a lengthy and distinguished career
in the U.S. Senate. He served there
until 1937, becoming Democratic majority
leader in 1932, and was an early and
steadfast ally of President Franklin
Roosevelt. Robinson died in the midst
of the controversy over Roosevelt’s “court-packing” plan;
paying tribute to Robinson, Roosevelt
called him “a pillar of strength
. . . . [he] has fallen with face to
the battle.”
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George Washington Hays
Born: September 23, 1863, at Camden, Arkansas
Died: September 15, 1927, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Camden, Arkansas
Served: 1913-1917
George Washington Hays studied law at the Washington and Lee University in
Lexington, Virginia; in 1894 Hays set up his own law practice in Camden. He
served as probate and county judge for Ouachita County from 1900 to 1905, and
served on the bench of the 13th Judicial Circuit from 1906 to 1913. Due to
the resignation of Governor Joseph T. Robinson, a special election was held
and on July 23, 1913, Hays became Governor of Arkansas. In office, Hays showed
little enthusiasm for reform and was accused by progressives of being susceptible
to pressure from various interest groups. Nevertheless, his personal popularity
and political acumen won him a second term in 1914. During his tenure, the
Alexander Road Improvement Act was passed, a child labor law was enacted (though
poorly enforced), and statewide prohibition became the law, after much vacillation
on Hays’s part. Hays vetoed a bill which would have legalized pari-mutuel
betting at Hot Springs, although he initially signed the bill into law. In
addition, during Hays’s tenure a full-time commission for governance
of the state’s charitable institutions was created, and construction
on the new state capitol was declared completed. After leaving office, Hays
returned to his law practice, publishing several articles in national periodicals,
including justifications for the death penalty and explaining the reasons behind
lynching of “low-grade negroes.” Shortly before his death in
1927, Hays supported the presidential candidacy of New York Democrat Alfred
Smith in several articles, predicting that Southern states would support the
Democratic nominee in order to protect their “social and racial interests.” |
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