James C. Nance | |
---|---|
Born | August 27, 1893 |
Died | September 3, 1984 | (aged 91)
Nationality | USA |
James C. "Jim" Nance (August 27, 1893 – September 3, 1984) was a community newspaper chain publisher and state legislative leader in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. Nance served as Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives and President pro tempore of the Oklahoma Senate and was a key sponsor and Legislative Chairman of the U.S. Uniform Law Commission (ULC), an advisory panel which drafted and proposed uniform acts and uniform state commerce laws. Nance became known as a legislative expert in a 40 year legislative career as one of two Oklahomans to hold the top posts in both chambers of the Oklahoma Legislature. The state's largest newspaper, The Daily Oklahoman called Nance "A Legislator's Legislator." Nance is the only Oklahoma House Speaker elected with a bipartisan coalition of Democrats and Republicans.
Nance was a lifelong registered Democrat, yet made Oklahoma history in being elected as Oklahoma's first and only bipartisan coalition Speaker of the House in 1929. Nance was elected with a coalition of dissident Democrats and the Republican caucus of legislators which voting together defeated House Speaker Allan Street, the Democrat establishment candidate. Nance is one of two men in Oklahoma who have been elected both Speaker of the House of Representatives and President Pro Tempore of the Senate. Tom Anglin is the other former official. Nance has the additional distinction of serving twice as Speaker and lengthy service as a life member of the U.S. Uniform Law Commission (ULC).
Nance was a publisher of community newspapers in Oklahoma beginning at Chandler in 1918, he and wife Ayleene had owned newspapers in Marlow, Walters and Purcell. A joint partnership with Joe McBride of Anadarko, Nance McBride Newspapers, owned weekly and daily community newspapers in Weatherford, Tonkawa, Clinton, Hobart, Henryetta, Hominy, Mangum, Anadarko, Sulphur, Alva, Poteau and Antlers. The ownership group included a local operator partner in each community. Nance was also involved in a newspaper venture in Lubbock TX.
Nance continued to write weekly editorials for the Purcell Register on public policy matters until the week he died on September 3, 1984 at the age of 91 in his home at Purcell.
According to The Daily Oklahoman front page story of Sept. 4 1984, Nance made his first move into Oklahoma politics winning election as State Representative from Stevens County in 1920 and served most of two terms and resigned in 1923 to seek an opportunity in Lubbock TX in a newspaper venture. Nance returned to the Oklahoma Legislature in 1927 again as a State Representative, but this time elected from Cotton County and served until 1932 when he won the Senate seat that included Cotton County. Nance later moved to Purcell in 1936, and was again elected State Representave from McClain County where he served one term before his 1938 election to the senate seat which included the larger area of Norman and Cleveland County, The University of Oklahoma and also Purcell and McClain county. Nance served 3 terms until 1950, and took a two year break from political life. Nance was then elected in 1952 as State Representative for Purcell and McClain County and served for an additional decade.
In his public service career beginning in 1920 and lasting until 1962, Nance was twice elected Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives, 1929 and 1953, and once President Pro Tem of the Oklahoma Senate in 1947-49.
Nance was a recognized national policy leader in drafting uniform laws governing business transactions for the individual states. He served as Legislative Chairman of the U.S. Uniform Law Commission sponsored by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. The NCCUSL is the influential non-partisan legislative consortium of commissioners from all 50 U.S. states and the U.S. territories. The group debates areas of public policy where uniform laws would benefit the states and drafts model legislation for consideration by the individual states. Most notably the NCCUSL drafted the landmark legislation Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) in conjunction with the American Law Institute.
Nance was a 1952 delegate to the Democrat National Convention in Chicago IL. He was a supporter of U.S. Diplomat Averell Harriman at the Democrat National convention which nominated Illinois Governor Adlai Stevenson to face Republican party nominee, General Dwight Eisenhower, the eventual winner in the U.S. Presidential election of 1952.
Back home in Oklahoma, Nance served as Master of Ceremonies for the Oklahoma Heritage Association 1963 Oklahoma Hall of Fame awards ceremony which inducted U.S. astronaut Gordon Cooper, OU football coach Bud Wilkinson, Oklahoma publisher and investor W.P. Bill Atkinson, Ada Jurist Orel Busby, Tulsa Educator Ben G. Henneke, and Ardmore civic leader Mrs. Paul Sutton. Nance served on the Oklahoma Heritage Association's board of directors from 1979 to 1984. Previously, Nance was named to the Oklahoma Hall of Fame in 1955.
Nance was a member of the Oklahoma Bar Association and had clerked in a law office in Arkansas, and used his legal background in drafting legislation while serving in the legislature. Nance used his legal knowledge in business transactions, yet did not regularly practice law for the public.
Nance downplayed ideological labels, and as an experienced businessman favored lawsuit reform, and strongly advocated tax cuts whenever economically feasible. During the 1950s and early 1960s, Nance publicly supported civil rights leader Clara Luper in the struggle to end segregation. In the mid-1960s, Nance editorialized against the Vietnam War, while advocating a strong national defense and military preparedness. He opposed "Right to Work" type labor legislation.
In Oklahoma politics, Nance was a close ally of Gov. George Nigh in his campaigns from 1958 to 1982. Also, Nance's son in law, Ben Langdon served as senior advisor to Gov. Nigh.
In 1975, Nance was subpoenaed as a character witness for the defendant Governor David Hall in his federal trial. Nance testified that pretrial daily newspaper coverage and media reports of the investigation prevented the defendant, ex-Gov. Hall, from receiving an impartial trial by an unbiased jury.
In 1983 at age 90, Nance and Chief District Judge J. Kenneth Love were hosts for a non-partisan town hall meeting of area civic leaders and reception honoring Molly and David L. Boren, U.S. Senator. In 1984, Nance endorsed the re-election campaign of Boren in an editorial published a few weeks prior to his death in September. Nance had endorsed Boren in 1978 for U.S. Senate, and 1974 in the race for Governor. Nance predicted "Boren will likely be sought out for national leadership."
In his retirement years, Nance was a regular commentator on OETA, the local PBS station, on its public affairs program panel Oklahoma Week in Review. Nance wrote regular weekly editorials on public policy matters in The Purcell Register. Nance mostly wrote non-partisan public policy articles and yet tended to favor Democrat candidates, and was a strong advocate of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and funding for infrastructure projects including highways and county roads, bridges, schools, colleges, universities and other infrastructure. Over 2500 public policy editorials by Nance are at the Oklahoma History Center in Oklahoma City.
Nance and his wife, Rosa Ayleene Carr Nance, were both Presbyterian and their 3 children were mostly raised in Walters, with prior residences in Chandler and Marlow: James C. Nance Jr. was born in Rogers AR, Mary Rosamond Nance McCurdy, and Bettye Nance Langdon were born in Chandler OK. The youngest child, Bettye, attended Purcell High School in her senior year. Nance had 6 grandchildren, 17 great grandchildren, and 1 great great grandchild. Other close family of Nance included nephew Bob McBrinn,Editor of the El Paso Herald-Post; niece Mary Frances Newbern of Fayetteville, AR; nephew David Newbern, Arkansas Supreme Court Justice; and niece Loretta Nance Pace, wife of District Judge Tom Pace of Norman, OK;
Nance was born August 27, 1893 in Rogers Arkansas, and enjoyed a typical 19th century rural farm life. His early years were spent raising farm animals and horses while working in the family apple orchard. In a speech to the Norman Rotary Club as guest of Retired U.S. Army Lt. Col. Alfred "Joe" Cunningham in 1982, Nance said that when he was a teenager his horse got sick and he knew he had to act fast to sell it before it died. With the money he made from the horse sale, Nance moved into town. He then began buying and selling produce during the daytime and working as a law clerk in the night time for his older brother John Nance, a Rogers AR attorney, who later became Arkansas State Senate Majority Leader. The educational experience of the legal clerkship in his formative years proved beneficial, as Nance was skilled in business transactions, land title work and could recite from memory complex legal descriptions. Nance used this law background as a legislator, as an investor and business owner.
Nance's sister, Edna Nance Harding, was the wife of University of Arkansas President Arthur M. Harding. Dr. Harding was a well known professor of Mathematics and Astronomy and frequent lecturer on the Chautauqua speaking circuit.
Nance's son James C. Nance Jr. was born in Rogers Arkansas, and his birth certificate lists Nance's occupation as Produce Salesman. Daughters Rosamond and Bettye were born in Chandler, Oklahoma.
Nance received the Distinguished Service Citation from the University of Oklahoma in 1982. The resolution by the OU Regents commended Nance for his sponsorship of legislation authorizing the issuance of bonds for funding the construction of buildings and dormitories built at the campus of The University of Oklahoma which was located within his state senate legislative district (Cleveland, McClain, and Garvin counties).
Oklahoma Gov. George Nigh wrote and delivered the funeral eulogy for Memorial services held in Purcell for Nance on September 6, 1984
The Norman Transcript said in a Sept. 4 1984 article that Nance was an effective senator for the Norman and Purcell areas and particularly a strong supporter of The University of Oklahoma, during the period of rapid growth of The University of Oklahoma, following WWII. The Transcript article stated that Nance led a successful statewide campaign to create an independent Board of Regents for The University of Oklahoma.
In 1994, Nance's granddaughter Nance Langdon Diamond of Shawnee became the first woman nominated by the Oklahoma Democratic party for the statewide office of Lt. Governor. Diamond served in 2002 as transition advisor for Gov. Brad Henry Previously in 1990 Ms. Diamond, who as a young child had sat on her grandfather's lap as he presided in the legislative chambers, became the first woman to address a joint session of the Oklahoma Legislature as she spoke in favor of legislation providing services to disadvantaged, neglected and abused children.
On July 1, 1968 civic leaders in Purcell and Lexington, led by banker and businessman Sam Ewing, requested the State Highway Commission name the US-77/SH-39 bridge the James C. Nance Bridge, to honor his legislative service, as OK title 69, Chapter 1, Article 16 Section 1612 established the James C. Nance Bridge.
In 1993 the bridge was renamed "James C. Nance Memorial Bridge" in a move sponsored by Sen. Trish Weedn (D-Purcell), a friend of Nance.
The Norman Transcript reported in a front page article on Sept. 4 1984 that Nance, as Speaker of The Oklahoma House of Representatives left his mark in many places in the Norman-Purcell area and led the campaign to replace a dangerous, narrow bridge across the South Canadian at Norman with the present multilane I-35 structure.
Nance-Boyer Hall at Cameron University in Lawton, OK is named jointly for Nance and Mr. Dave Boyer, a former state Senator in Lawton, the action was announced by Cameron President John Coffey. In the earlier portion of Nance's political career his legislative district was Cotton and Stephens counties
A small park area 1.5-acre (6,100 m2) of central city greenbelt area of Walnut Creek in Purcell was named Jim and Ayleene Nance Park in 2000. The greenspace park fronts 7th street, 8th Street and Jefferson Street and was purchased and donated to the City of Purcell by family members of Jim and Ayleene Nance's three children: James C. Nance Jr., Rosamond Nance McCurdy and Betty Nance Langdon.
In 1982, Nance was honored by the Oklahoma Press Association and named to the Oklahoma Journalism Hall of Fame. Nance had previously served on the Oklahoma Press Association Board of Directors.
In April 1982, Nance was honored by Governor Overton James and Lt. Governor Bill Anoatubby of The Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma. James was Chairman of the Inter-Tribal Council of The Five Civilized Tribes. The event held at Purcell High School auditorium honored Nance for his years of community service and service to Native Americans in the United States. Nance's wife Ayleene was a registered member of The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and had unregistered ancestors in The Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma. Mrs.Nance was an enthusiast of Native American art, culture and heritage of indigenous peoples of the Americas. Mrs. Nance wrote a biographical article about her great-great grandparents Captain James Reynolds and wife Felicity Turnbull Reynolds,who was a Native American. The article on the pioneer residents of Indian Territory /Eastern Oklahoma community of Cameron, was published in The Chronicles of Oklahoma by The Oklahoma Historical Society.
Directory of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State Election Board
Daily Oklahoman, September 1984 news article
Daily Oklahoman, September 1981 news article
James C. Nance, Newspaperman and Lawmaker Norman Transcript Newspaper 3-07-05
Story of Oklahoma Newspapers authored by Ed Carter Published by Oklahoma Press Association
When Both Sides Worked Together Norman Transcript Newspaper 2-27-05
Nance Speech to Norman Rotary Club, Oct. 1982 Norman Transcript
Oklahoma Statues Citationized 1968 Title 69. Roads, bridges Chapter 1, Art. 16, Sec. 1612 James C. Nance Bridge
Cameron University www.cameron.edu/info/campus_map/buildings/nance_boyer
Oklahoma Heritage Association
The Purcell Register newspaper www.purcellregister.com