Phillips Lee Goldsborough

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Phillips L. Goldsborough

47th Governor of Maryland
Preceded by Austin L. Crothers
Succeeded by Emerson C. Harrington
Born
Princess Anne, Maryland
Political party Republican

Phillips Lee Goldsborough I (August 6, 1865 - October 22, 1946), a member of the United States Republican Party, was a United States Senator representing State of Maryland from 1929 to 1935. He was also the 47th Governor of Maryland from 1912 to 1916 and Comptroller of the Maryland Treasury from 1898-1900.

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[edit] Early life and career

Goldsborough was born in Princess Anne, Maryland and was educated in public and private schools. While working as a clerk for the United States Navy, he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1886, commencing practice in Cambridge, Maryland soon thereafter. He also held an interest in banking. In 1893 he married Mary Ellen Showell (c1865-1930) and they had two sons: Brice W. Goldsborough; and Phillips Lee Goldsborough II.

In 1891 and in 1895, Goldsborough was elected state’s attorney for Dorchester County, Maryland. In 1897, he was elected to the position of comptroller of the treasury of Maryland, but was defeated in the next election by Dr. Joshua W. Hering.

He was appointed collector of internal revenue for the district of Maryland in 1902 by President Theodore Roosevelt and later by President William Howard Taft.

[edit] Governor of Maryland

Over time, Goldsborough built a large base of support in the state, which encouraged him to run for Governor of Maryland in 1912. He defeated Democratic challenger Arthur P. Gorman, Jr., becoming only the second Republican governor in state history up to that time.

Goldsborough's tenure as governor saw a great deal of education reform, including the appointment of school boards and teacher certification. It was also during his tenure that the state purchased the Maryland Agricultural College, which is now the University of Maryland, College Park.

Goldsborough
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Goldsborough

[edit] United States Senate

Goldsborough tried to win the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate seat from Maryland, but was defeated in the Republican primary by Joseph I. France. He left politics afterwards and resumed his law practice in Cambridge, and also became president of the National Union Bank.

When Republican Herbert Hoover was elected President of the U.S., Goldsborough decided to take this opportunity to again try for the senate seat in Maryland. He was successfully elected as to the United States Senate in the election of 1928, defeating incumbent William Cabell Bruce.

[edit] Later career and death

In 1934, he was not a candidate for re-election to the senate, but instead decided to run again for Governor of Maryland. He lost in the Republican primary to Harry W. Nice, who went on to win the election itself.

President Franklin Delano Roosevelt appointed Goldsborough to the director's board of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in 1935. He served in that position until he died in 1946 in Baltimore, Maryland, and is buried in the old churchyard of Christ Episcopal Church of his hometown of Cambridge.

[edit] References

Preceded by
Robert Patterson Graham
Comptroller of Maryland
1898–1900
Succeeded by
Joshua W. Hering
Preceded by
Austin Lane Crothers
Governor of Maryland
1912–1916
Succeeded by
Emerson C. Harrington
Preceded by
William Cabell Bruce
Class 1 U.S. Senator from Maryland
1929—1935
Succeeded by
George L. P. Radcliffe