

Portrait painted by Nancy Harris |
David Hampton Pryor
Born: August 29, 1934, at Camden, Arkansas
Died: n/a
Buried: n/a
Served: 1975-1979
David Pryor received
a B.A. in political science from the
University of Arkansas in 1957 and
a LL.B. from the University of Arkansas
School of Law in 1964. A newspaperman
from 1957 until 1961, Pryor’s
political career began in the Arkansas
House of Representatives where he served
three terms, 1961 to 1966. He was then
elected to the U.S. House of Representatives,
where he served from 1967 to 1972.
He was elected Governor in 1974 and
served two terms. During his tenure,
Pryor championed reform of the 1874
Constitution and was instrumental in
the calling of two conventions to revise
the state’s fundamental document.
Pryor’s administrations were
noted for the quality of his appointments
to boards and commissions, including
numerous women and African-Americans,
and by his devotion to fiscal restraint.
His legislative programs included creation
of the Local Services and Natural and
Cultural Heritage Departments, education
aid for the elderly and the ultimately
defeated “Arkansas Plan” which
would have shifted much taxation responsibility
from state to local government. In
1978 Pryor successfully sought a seat
in the U.S. Senate, where he served
until 1996. Most recently, Pryor has
served a two-year term as the Director
of the Institute of Politics at the
Kennedy School of Government at Harvard
University and in late 2003 was tapped
as the first dean of the University
of Arkansas’s Clinton School
of Public Service. |

Portrait painted
by Nancy Harris |
William Jefferson Clinton
Born: August 19, 1946, at Hope, Arkansas
Died: n/a
Buried: n/a
Served: 1979-1981; 1983-1992
William J. Clinton was
born in Hope, Arkansas and earned a
bachelor's degree in international
affairs in 1968 from Georgetown University
School of Foreign Service and attended
Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar.
After graduating from Yale Law School
in 1973, he joined the faculty of the
University of Arkansas School of Law
and practiced in Fayetteville. He was
elected attorney general in 1976 and
in 1978 won his first bid for governor,
becoming the state’s second-youngest
governor. Clinton’s first administration
advanced small business development,
improved teacher standards and road
construction but suffered from the
effects of regional and nation economic
woes, natural disasters and bad publicity
stemming from an influx of Cuban refugees
and increased vehicle-licensing fees.
In 1980 Clinton’s re-election
bid failed but in 1982 he regained
the governor’s office, to which
he was re-elected in 1984, 1986, and
1990. Notable initiatives of Clinton’s
second tenure include education reform,
multilevel economic development and
adoption of state code of ethics. He
served as chair of the Democratic Leadership
Council, the Democratic Governors'
Association, and the Education Commission
of the States. In 1986 he served as
chair of the Southern Growth Policies
Board and of the National Governors
Association from 1986 to 1987. In October
1991, Governor Clinton resigned his
office in order to pursue, successfully,
the Democratic party’s nomination
for president. |

Portrait painted
by Nancy Harris |
Frank Durward White
Born: June 4, 1933, at Texarkana, Texas
Died: May 21, 2003, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Mount Holly Cemetery, Little Rock
Served: 1981-1983
Frank D. White was born
Durward Frank Kyle on June 3, 1933.
His mother remarried and his stepfather,
Frank White, adopted him. He graduated
from the New Mexico Military Institute
and received an appointment to the
United States Naval Academy in 1952.
After graduation from Annapolis in
1956, White took a commission in the
U.S. Air Force, accumulating more than
1,800 flying hours as a captain. He
entered business in Little Rock in
1961 with the Merrill Lynch, Pierce,
Fenner and Smith securities brokerage;
White later was affiliated with Little
Rock banking concerns. He was appointed
director of the Arkansas Industrial
Development Commission in 1975, a position
he held until 1977. Elected governor
in 1980, White’s friendly personality
and self-deprecating style won him
much personal popularity but his legislative
program was modest and won little support
in the Legislature or around Arkansas.
During his tenure, he signed a measure
approved by the legislature requiring
Arkansas teachers to include "creation
science" in the curriculum if
the theory of evolution was also taught.
The law was later struck down as unconstitutional
by a federal judge but drew national
attention. White’s efforts to
reform utility regulation were overshadowed
by charges of coziness with utility
company executives. Frank White lost
his 1982 bid for re-election, and returned
to commercial banking. Arkansas Governor
Mike Huckabee named White his state
banking commissioner in July 1998.
Frank White passed away on May 21,
2003 and was laid to rest after lying
in state in the Capitol Rotunda. |

Portrait painted
by Nancy Harris |
James Guy Tucker Jr.
Born: June 13, 1943, at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Died: n/a
Buried: n/a
Served: 1991-1996
James Guy Tucker Jr. was born in Oklahoma
City and was raised in Arkansas. He
received a bachelor's degree in government
from Harvard University in 1964 and
a law degree from the University of
Arkansas in 1968. He was a member of
the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve and was
a civilian correspondent in South Vietnam
in 1965 and 1967. He served as a prosecuting
attorney; state attorney general; and
a member of the U.S. House of Representatives,
where he served on the Ways and Means
Committee. He was elected lieutenant
governor in 1990; he resigned from
his position as a senior partner in
his law firm to become acting governor
in October 1991, when then-Governor
Bill Clinton began his campaign for
President. He served the balance of
the Clinton term and then was elected
to a four-year term in November 1994.
As governor, Tucker pursued a course
of economy, cutting agency budgets
and funneling saved monies into education,
but called a special session of the
Legislature in August 1994 to deal
with the rising juvenile crime rate.
Over thirty measures from this session
were signed into law, affecting most
aspects of the juvenile justice system.
In 1995, however, Tucker’s political
fortunes began to fail. An initiative
on his part to improve roads was defeated.
This was followed by his indictment
as part of the expanding Whitewater
investigation surrounding President
Clinton. Tucker’s July 1996 conviction
was followed by his resignation. Though
he paid a large fine, Tucker would
spend little actual time in prison
because of fragile health. He maintains
a residence in Little Rock and is engaged
in various business ventures. |

Portrait painted
by Nancy Harris |
Michael Huckabee
Born: August 24, 1955, at Hope, Arkansas
Died: n/a
Buried: n/a
Served: 1996-2007
A graduate of Ouachita Baptist University and an ordained Baptist minister, Mike Huckabee served as president of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention and challenged veteran U.S. Senator Dale Bumpers as a Republican in the election of 1992. Although Bumpers won re-election, Huckabee polled about 40 percent of the vote. A special election was called in 1993 to choose a lieutenant governor; Huckabee defeated the Democratic nominee and earned the largest vote percentage of any Republican candidate in Arkansas's history when he successfully sought a full term in the 1996 general elections As lieutenant governor he served as acting governor on several occasions. He became Governor of Arkansas in July 1996 when his predecessor resigned. Huckabee was elected to a full four-year term as governor in 1998 and was reelected in November 2002. As governor, he advocated the reorganization of state government and various education reforms in Arkansas that significantly expanded the availability of college scholarships, increased the number of charter schools, and established new approaches to workforce education. Huckabee also advocated improved health care for children, physical fitness for all as a public-health issue, a sales-tax increase to fund state park improvements and bond issues to rebuild and improve the state's interstate highways. In the latter years of his administration, Huckabee unsuccessfully advocated school district consolidation in order to bring the state into compliance with a court-ordered overhaul of school funding and in August 2005 coordinated the state's responses to the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. |
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Mike Beebe
Arkansas’s current governor is the Honorable Mike Beebe. Governor Beebe was elected in November 2006 and took office in January of 2007. For more information on him please visit www.governor.arkansas.gov. |
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