Price Daniel
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Price Daniel | |
39th Governor of Texas
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In office January 15, 1957 – January 21, 1963 |
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Lieutenant(s) | Ben Ramsey |
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Preceded by | Allan Shivers |
Succeeded by | John Connally |
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Born | October 10, 1910 Dayton, Texas |
Died | August 25 1988 (aged 77) |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Jean Houston Daniel |
Profession | Politician |
Marion Price Daniel, Sr. (October 10, 1910 - August 25, 1988) was a Democratic Party U.S. senator and politician from the state of Texas.
Daniel was born in Dayton, Texas, and he graduated from Baylor University. He worked as a lawyer in Liberty County, Texas. Daniel won a seat in the Texas House of Representatives in 1939 as a Democrat. Daniel opposed Texas adopting a sales tax and he was elected Speaker of the House in 1943. After a term as Speaker, Daniel enlisted in the United States Army as a Private. He was discharged in 1946 with the rank of captain.
He returned to Texas and won the seat of Attorney General. Daniel defended the University of Texas law school in the Sweatt v. Painter case. Daniel was also involved in the Tidelands controversy, and he endorsed Dwight D. Eisenhower in the 1952 Presidential Election. Daniel was elected to the United States Senate in 1952 and one of his first acts in the Senate was to draft a tidelands bill which was signed by President Eisenhower. Opposed to desegregation efforts, he also signed the so-called Southern Manifesto in 1956. Daniel also worked on a narcotics probe and reforming the electoral college.
Then U.S. Senator Daniel was elected governor of Texas in 1956. His intraparty rival Ralph Yarborough went on to succeed Daniel (after a temporary appointee, William A. Blakley) in the Senate in a special election held in 1957. Daniel was reelected as governor in 1958 and 1960. In 1960, Daniel won by a much larger margin for governor than John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson had scored as the Democratic presidential and vice presidential nominees. Daniel received 1,637,755 votes (72.8 percent) to Republican William M. Steger's 612,963 ballots (27.2 percent). Yet Kennedy and Johnson barely won the Texas electoral votes over Richard M. Nixon.
In 1961, the legislature passed a 2-cent sales tax, which Daniel didn't sign but allowed to become law so the state would not go broke. After the passage of the sales tax, Daniel's popularity waned, and he failed at his attempt to be elected to a fourth term in 1962. He lost the Democratic nomination to former Navy Secretary John Connally, who then defeated the Republican Jack Cox of Houston.
He was appointed to head the Office of Emergency Preparedness by Lyndon B. Johnson. He was appointed by Governor Preston Smith to the Texas Supreme Court in 1971, he was re-elected twice in 1972 and 1979 before retiring during his second term. The Price Daniel, Sr. State Office Building was named in his honor.
Daniel's wife, Jean Houston Daniel, was a great-great-granddaughter of the legendary Sam Houston. Daniel's son, Marion Price Daniel, Jr., was, like his father, later Speaker of the Texas House but served only one term. He was killed by a gunshot in 1981. His second wife was accused of murder, but she was acquitted.
[edit] External links
- Marion Price Daniel, Sr. from the Handbook of Texas Online
- Historic photographs of Price Daniel, hosted by the Portal to Texas History
- Governor's Message to the 56th legislature., hosted by the Portal to Texas History
- Photos of Price Daniel, hosted by the Portal to Texas History
Preceded by Alfred Roark |
Member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 14 (Liberty) 1939–1945 |
Succeeded by David Read |
Preceded by Homer Lakerby Leonard |
Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives 1943–1945 |
Succeeded by Claud Henry Gilmer |
Preceded by Tom Connally |
United States Senator (Class 1) from Texas 1953—1957 |
Succeeded by William A. Blakley |
Preceded by Allan Shivers |
Governor of Texas 1957—1963 |
Succeeded by John Connally |
Preceded by Clyde E. Smith |
Justice, Texas Supreme Court, Place 7 January 1, 1971–December 31, 1978 |
Succeeded by Franklin S. Spears |
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 |
Speakers of the Texas House of Representatives | |
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Crump • Brown • Branch • Crump • Bourland • Perkins • Henderson • Keenan • Dickson • Runnels • Bee • W. Taylor • Locke • M. Taylor • Buckley • Darnell • Buckley • M. Taylor • Burford • Evans • Sinclair • M. Taylor • Bryan • Bonner • Cochran • Reeves • Gibson • Foster • Pendleton • Alexander • Milner • Cochran • Smith • Dashiell • Sherrill • Prince • Neff • Seabury • Love • Kennedy • Marshall • Rayburn • Terrell • Woods • Fuller • Thomason • Thomas • Seagler • Satterwhite • Bobbitt • Barron • Minor • Stevenson • Calvert • Morse • Leonard • Daniel • Gilmer • Reed • Manford • Senterfitt • Lindsey • Carr • Turman • Tunnell • Barnes • Mutscher • Slider • Price • Daniel, Jr. • Clayton • Lewis • Laney • Craddick |
Categories: 1910 births | 1988 deaths | American military personnel of World War II | Governors of Texas | Members of the Texas House of Representatives | People from Houston | Southern Manifesto | Speakers of the Texas House of Representatives | Texas Supreme Court justices | Texas Attorneys General | United States Senators from Texas | Baylor University alumni | Texas Democrats