Samuel H. Holland | |
---|---|
Member of the Arkansas Senate from the 22nd district | |
In office January 6,1873 –May 28,1874 [1] Servingwith S. A. Duke | |
Succeeded by | redistricted |
Samuel H. Holland was a state senator in Arkansas in 1873 and,for a special session,in 1874 [2] during the Reconstruction era. He also served as a teacher, [3] sheriff,jailer,and principal. He taught at the Howard School,named for Oliver O. Howard,until it was closed by the school board in 1871. The school building was used by the United Sons of Ham,a secret African American benevolent organization. [4] He was involved in the establishment of millage fees to fund area schools. [5]
Howard served in the Arkansas Senate during the 19th Arkansas General Assembly. He represented the 22nd district,which consisted of Ashley,Chicot,Drew,Desha,and Lincoln counties,alongside S. A. Duke. He is registered as representing the same constituency during the 1874 Extraordinary Arkansas General Assembly called by Governor Elisha Baxter,but is listed as not present by the Arkansas Secretary of State. [6]
Dale Leon Bumpers was an American lawyer and politician who served as the 38th Governor of Arkansas (1971–1975) and in the United States Senate (1975–1999). He was a member of the Democratic Party. Prior to his death,he was counsel at the Washington office of law firm Arent Fox LLP,where his clients included Riceland Foods and the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.
David Hampton Pryor is an American politician and former Democratic United States Representative and United States Senator from the State of Arkansas. Pryor also served as the 39th Governor of Arkansas from 1975 to 1979 and was a member of the Arkansas House of Representatives from 1960 to 1966. He served as the interim chairman of the Arkansas Democratic Party,following Bill Gwatney's assassination.
James Paul Clarke was a lawyer and politician from the Arkansas Delta during the Progressive Era. He served in public office over a period of almost 30 years,rising from the Arkansas General Assembly to Attorney General of Arkansas and later 18th Governor of Arkansas,ending his career in the United States Senate. In a period of Democratic Party hegemony known as the "Solid South",Clarke blended positions of the budding Populist movement,such as free silver and railroad regulation,with white supremacy and his gifted skills as an orator to popularity and electoral success.
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Ezekiel Candler "Took" Gathings was a U.S. Representative from Arkansas,representing Arkansas' First Congressional District from 1939 to 1969. A segregationist conservative,Gathings was an ally of Strom Thurmond,and stood against all civil rights legislation. Gathings also chaired the 1952 House Select Committee on Current Pornographic Materials,which advocated for censorship of obscene magazines,books,and comics.
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William Lee Cazort,Sr. was a lawyer and Democratic politician from Johnson County in the Arkansas River Valley. Winning a seat in the Arkansas House of Representatives in 1915,Cazort became a rising star in Arkansas politics for the next eight years. He was defeated in the 1924 Democratic gubernatorial primary,but served as the fifth and seventh Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas from 1929 to 1931 under Governor Harvey Parnell and from 1933 to 1937 under Governor Junius Marion Futrell. Cazort also sought the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in 1930 and 1936,but failed to gain necessary statewide support and withdrew before the primary both times.
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Larry R. Teague is an American politician and a Democratic member of the Arkansas Senate representing District 10,which includes Howard,Montgomery,Pike,and Polk counties and parts of Clark,Hempstead,Nevada,and Sevier counties. He also serves as Senate Minority Whip. He is ineligible to seek re-election in 2022 due to term limits. Teague served consecutively in the Arkansas General Assembly from January 2009 until January 2013 in the Senate District 20 seat and from January 1997 through January 2002 in the Arkansas House of Representatives District 19 seat.
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W. H. Logan was a farmer,preacher,teacher and politician in the Arkansas Delta. He served in the Arkansas Senate from 1887 to 1891. He was born in Ohio in the first half of the 1850s. During his career he served as a justice of the peace,preacher,teacher,and farmer.
Richard A. Dawson was a lawyer and state legislator in Arkansas. He was born in Virginia and his father was a minister. Dawson studied at Oberlin College,and received his law degree from the Old University of Chicago. Dawson practiced law in Pine Bluff,Arkansas and represented the area in the Arkansas General Assembly from 1873 to 1874 and from 1879 to 1881.
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