Arch A. Moore, Jr.
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Arch A. Moore, Jr. | |
28th & 30th Governor of West Virginia
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In office 1969 – 1977 1985 – 1989 |
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Preceded by | Hulett C. Smith (1969) John D. Rockefeller, IV (1985) |
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Succeeded by | John D. Rockefeller, IV (1977) Gaston Caperton (1989) |
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Born | April 16, 1923 Moundsville, West Virginia |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Shelley Riley Moore |
Profession | Politician |
Religion | Methodist |
Arch Alfred Moore, Jr. (born April 16, 1923) was the Governor of West Virginia from 1969 until 1977 and from 1985 until 1989. He was a Congressman from 1957 until entering the governor's office. He is a member of the United States Republican Party. He ran for reelection in 1988 but was defeated by Gaston Caperton. Allegations of corruption were a major reason for his defeat. He was eventually prosecuted for corruption and pled guilty to five felony charges. He was sentenced to five years and ten months in prison in 1990. He served over three years before his release. As a result of his conviction, Moore was disbarred and forfeited his state pension. In 1995, he paid a settlement of $750,000 to the state.
Moore was born in Moundsville, West Virginia in the state's industrial northern panhandle. He briefly attended Easton College in Easton, Pennsylvania before joining the United States Army during World War II. He received a disfiguring wound in the jaw during fighting in Germany. Moore was left for dead for two days in a German farmer's beet field after 33 of the 36 members of his platoon died in battle.
He then entered West Virginia University graduating in 1948 and then from its law school in 1951. While at WVU he was involved with student government and founded "Mountaineer Week" a celebration of West Virginia culture in response to his perception that the growing number of out-of-state students at the school were changing its character. The event has become a permanent part of the school's calendar.
Moore was elected to the West Virginia House of Delegates in 1952. In 1954, Moore made his first run for Congress, challlenging incumbent Democratic Congressman Robert Mollohan. Moore lost. In 1956, Mollohan vacated the seat to run for Governor of West Virginia, a race he lost to Republican Cecil Underwood. In 1956, Moore ran for the open congressional seat, winning by a margin of just 762 votes. Moore would subsequently be re-elected through the 1966 election, before seeking the governor's office in 1968. His terms in the House were marked by strong support for public works projects and for civil rights.
The state's Constitution, which had formerly had a one-term term limit and provided for a weak governor system, was amended in 1968 to strengthen the powers of the Governor and in 1970 to provide for a two-term limit. Moore became the first person re-elected governor in 1972, defeating Jay Rockefeller. Moore's first two terms as governor are best remembered for improvements in the state's highway system and for the Buffalo Creek Flood disaster. During Moore's first two terms as Governor, West Virginia built over 225 miles of interstate highways through mountainous terrain and the New River Gorge Bridge, once the world's longest steel arch bridge.
In 1976 Moore was term limited from seeking a third term and declined to challenge Robert C. Byrd for a seat in the United States Senate. He rather began a two-year campaign for the state's other Senate seat, which was expected to be vacated by the aging Jennings Randolph in 1978. To the surprise of almost all observers, the obviously declining Randolph stood for re-election. His campaign was entirely financed by then-governor Rockefeller, as Randolph's six-year term as Senator and a theoretical second Rockefeller term as governor would both expire in 1984, permitting Rockefeller to run for an open seat. Moore was outspent by 5 to 1 in this election, and lost by 4717 votes.
In 1980 Moore sought his third term as governor. Rockefeller outspent him by a figure of 20 to 1, and Moore again lost a close race.
In 1984 Moore again ran for governor and was returned by a very large margin, becoming the only West Virginia governor to be elected to three terms in office. He again turned his attention to highways, and saw the completion of last major section of interstate highway in the country, which had been left unbuilt during the Rockefeller terms, in 1988. He was defeated for re-election in 1988 and subsuquently pled guilty to receiving a bribe relative to a refund of a workers compensation tax from a coal executive and served over three years in federal prison. Moore has always maintained that his plea was a part of a legal strategy and his attempts to withdraw it and stand trial on the matter were denied. As of 2005 he continues to maintain his innocence.
Moore now lives quietly in Glen Dale.
His daughter Shelley Moore Capito is currently a member of the United States House of Representatives from West Virginia's 2nd Congressional district.
In 2006, former West Virginia Tax Commissioner Brad Crouser, who served during Governor Moore's third term, published the first biography of Moore, called, "Arch." Arch: The Life of Governor Arch A. Moore, Jr..
Preceded by Robert Mollohan |
U.S. Representative of West Virginia's 1st Congressional District 1957–1969 |
Succeeded by Robert Mollohan |
Preceded by Hulett C. Smith |
Governor of West Virginia 1969–1977 |
Succeeded by Jay Rockefeller |
Preceded by Jay Rockefeller |
Governor of West Virginia 1985–1989 |
Succeeded by Gaston Caperton |
Governors of West Virginia | |
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Boreman • Farnsworth • Stevenson • Jacob • Mathews • Jackson • Wilson • Fleming • MacCorkle • Atkinson • White • Dawson • Glasscock • Hatfield • Cornwell • Morgan • Gore • Conley • Kump • Holt • Neely • Meadows • Patteson • Marland • Underwood • Barron • Smith • Moore • Rockefeller • Moore • Caperton • Underwood • Wise • Manchin |
Categories: Cleanup from November 2006 | 1923 births | Living people | Governors of West Virginia | People from West Virginia | Members of the United States House of Representatives from West Virginia | Republican Party (United States) | West Virginia Republican Party members | West Virginia University alumni