James Allred
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James Allred (1899-1959) was a U.S. political figure and judge.
He was born on March 29, 1899, in Bowie, Texas and was christened James Burr V Allred. James and Burr were uncles' names, but the "V" stood for nothing. Nonetheless he was known as "Vee" until he enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1918.
Allred had enrolled in Rice Institute in 1917 but left school soon thereafter because of financial problems. He served in the U.S. Immigration Service for a short while before enlisting in the Navy during World War I.
After the war he clerked in a law office in Wichita Falls, Texas, obtained a law degree from Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee, and began law practice in Wichita Falls.
Allred's public-service career began in 1923 when Gov. Pat Neff appointed him assistant district attorney in Wichita Falls to complete an unexpired term. He was elected to a full term in 1924. In 1926 he ran for attorney general of Texas as a Democrat but was defeated. In his next try for elective office, in 1930, he was elected attorney general at age 31, defeating the incumbent and becoming the youngest man to hold that office. He was reelected in 1932. He then served two terms as Texas governor, from 1935 to 1939.
On leaving the governorship, he was appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to district judge in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas. He served in that office from 1939 to 1942, when he resigned to run against an incumbent senator, W. Lee O'Daniel, for his seat in the U.S. Senate. Allred failed to unseat O'Daniel, and Roosevelt then nominated him to a seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, but the Senate Judiciary Committee would not approve his nomination. In 1951 he was reappointed to the Southern District judgeship by President Harry S. Truman, and he served in that position until he died of a heart attack in Laredo, Texas on September 24, 1959, a few hours after recessing court because he felt "a little under the weather." He lived in Corpus Christi, Texas during this judicial tenure and was buried in Wichita Falls.
He has been described as a "talented and fiery" lawyer. As attorney general he filed an unprecedent number of suits, including many anti-trust cases, and recovered millions of dollars for the state. As governor he embraced Roosevelt's New Deal, and during his administrations the legislature passed social security measures that included old-age assistance and teacher retirement programs. He opposed the Ku Klux Klan and repeal of prohibition.
He married Joe Betsy Miller of Wichita Falls on June 20, 1927. She was born on October 15, 1905 in Altus, Oklahoma and died on June 7, 1993 in Wichita Falls.
[edit] References
- Ex-Governor Allred Dies After Seizure. Dallas Morning News, September 25, 1959, sec. I, p. 1.
- Fiery Allred Got Into Politics Early. Dallas Morning News, September 25, 1959, sec. I, p. 3.
- James V. Allred of U.S. Bench, 60. New York Times, September 25, 1959.
- Joe Betsy Allred, widow of former governor, dies. Dallas Morning News, June 9, 1993, p. 30A.
[edit] External links
- James Burr V Allred from the Handbook of Texas Online
- Legislative Messages of Hon. James V. Allred, Governor of Texas 1935-1939, hosted by the Portal to Texas History
Preceded by Miriam A. Ferguson |
Governor of Texas 1935-1939 |
Succeeded by W. Lee O'Daniel |
Governors of Texas | |
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J.P. Henderson • Wood • Bell • J.W. Henderson • Pease • Runnels • Houston • Clark • Lubbock • Murrah • Stockdale • Hamilton • Throckmorton • Pease • Davis • Coke • Hubbard • Roberts • Ireland • Ross • Hogg • Culberson • Sayers • Lanham • Campbell • Colquitt • J. Ferguson • Hobby • Neff • M. Ferguson • Moody • Sterling • M. Ferguson • Allred • O'Daniel • Stevenson • Jester • Shivers • Daniel • Connally • Smith • Briscoe • Clements • White • Clements • Richards • Bush • Perry |