Walter Welford
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Walter Welford | |
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In office 1935 – 1937 |
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Preceded by | Thomas H. Moodie |
Succeeded by | William Langer |
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Born | May 21, 1868 Yorkshire, England |
Died | June 28, 1952 Pembina County, North Dakota (disputed) |
Political party | Republican |
Walter Welford (May 21, 1868–June 28, 1952) was born in Bellery, Yorkshire, England. He was inaugurated as the twentieth Governor of North Dakota on February 2, 1935 after Thomas H. Moodie was removed from office after it was determined he was ineligible to hold the office. He served until 1936 when he lost the race to former governor William Langer.
[edit] Biography
Walter Welford served as township clerk at Pembina for twenty years. He also served in the North Dakota House of Representatives and Senate. As Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota, Welford became governor after Thomas H. Moodie was disqualified. Welford was a staunch supporter of the Nonpartisan League (NPL), a farmers' political group. During Welford's administration the state was caught in the grip of the Great Depression. The 1936 crop yield was disastrously low because of drought. Welford met with President Franklin Roosevelt and obtained federal aid for drought-stricken farmers. In 1936, Welford decided to run for office again. He beat former Governor William Langer for the Republican gubernatorial nomination, but Langer refused to drop out, and entered the general election as an independent. Welford lost the three-way governor's election to Langer. (The third-place candidate was Democrat John Moses, who became North Dakota's twenty-second governor, following Langer's second term.) Welford died in Altona, Manitoba, Canada (or in Pembina County, North Dakota} on June 28, 1952 at the age of 84. [1][2]
Preceded by Ole H. Olson |
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota 1935–1936 |
Succeeded by Thorstein H.H. Thoresen |
Preceded by Thomas H. Moodie |
Governor of North Dakota 1935–1936 |
Succeeded by William Langer |
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