List of Governors of Louisiana
This is a list of the governors of Louisiana, from acquisition by the United States in 1803 to the present day; for earlier governors of Louisiana see List of colonial governors of Louisiana.
Colonial period (French and Spanish governors)
Note: from 1804 to 1812, what would later become the State of Louisiana was known as the "Territory of Orleans". The contemporary "Louisiana Territory" was to the north, and did not include modern Louisiana.
First period of U.S. statehood
# |
Name |
Picture |
Took Office |
Left Office |
Party |
Notes |
1 |
William C. C. Claiborne |
|
April 30, 1812 |
December 16, 1816 |
Democratic-Republican |
|
2 |
Jacques Villeré |
|
December 16, 1816 |
December 18, 1820 |
Democratic-Republican |
|
3 |
Thomas B. Robertson |
|
December 18, 1820 |
November 15, 1824 |
Democratic-Republican |
[2] |
4 |
Henry S. Thibodaux |
|
November 15, 1824 |
December 13, 1824 |
Democratic-Republican |
[3] |
5 |
Henry Johnson |
|
December 13, 1824 |
December 15, 1828 |
Democratic-Republican |
|
6 |
Pierre Derbigny |
|
December 15, 1828 |
October 6, 1829 |
National Republican/Anti-Jackson |
[4] |
7 |
Armand Beauvais |
|
October 6, 1829 |
January 14, 1830 |
Whig |
[5] |
8 |
Jacques Dupré |
|
January 14, 1830 |
January 31, 1831 |
Whig |
[3] |
9 |
André B. Roman |
|
January 31, 1831 |
February 4, 1835 |
Whig |
|
10 |
Edward D. White, Sr. |
|
February 4, 1835 |
February 4, 1839 |
Whig |
|
|
André B. Roman |
|
February 4, 1839 |
January 30, 1843 |
Whig |
|
11 |
Alexandre Mouton |
|
January 30, 1843 |
February 12, 1846 |
Democratic |
|
12 |
Isaac Johnson |
|
February 12, 1846 |
January 28, 1850 |
Democratic |
|
13 |
Joseph Marshall Walker |
|
January 28, 1850 |
January 18, 1853 |
Democratic |
|
14 |
Paul Octave Hébert |
|
January 18, 1853 |
January 22, 1856 |
Democratic |
|
15 |
Robert C. Wickliffe |
|
January 22, 1856 |
January 23, 1860 |
Democratic |
|
16 |
Thomas Overton Moore |
|
January 23, 1860 |
April 24, 1862 |
Democratic |
|
Governors of Confederate-held territory in Louisiana
Governors of Union-held territory in Louisiana
No. |
Name |
Picture |
Took Office |
Left Office |
Party |
Notes |
18 |
George F. Shepley |
|
July 2, 1862 |
March 4, 1864 |
Military |
|
19 |
Michael Hahn |
|
March 4, 1864 |
March 4, 1865 |
Republican |
[7] |
Reconstruction Era (Governors subordinate to U.S. military rule)
Post-Reconstruction
No. |
Name |
Picture |
Took Office |
Left Office |
Party |
Notes |
23 |
Henry C. Warmoth |
|
June 27, 1868 |
December 9, 1872 |
Republican |
[15] |
24 |
P. B. S. Pinchback |
|
December 29, 1872 |
January 13, 1873 |
Republican |
[16] |
25 |
John McEnery |
|
January 13, 1873 |
May 22, 1873 |
Democratic |
[17] |
26 |
William P. Kellogg |
|
January 13, 1873 |
January 8, 1877 |
Republican |
[17] |
27* |
Stephen B. Packard |
|
January 8, 1877 |
April 24, 1877 |
Republican |
[18] |
28 |
Francis T. Nicholls |
|
January 8, 1877 |
January 14, 1880 |
Democratic |
[19] |
29 |
Louis A. Wiltz |
|
January 14, 1880 |
October 16, 1881 |
Democratic |
[4] |
30 |
Samuel D. McEnery |
|
October 16, 1881 |
May 20, 1888 |
Democratic |
[20] |
|
Francis T. Nicholls |
|
May 20, 1888 |
May 10, 1892 |
Democratic |
|
31 |
Murphy J. Foster |
|
May 10, 1892 |
May 8, 1900 |
Democratic |
[21] |
32 |
William W. Heard |
|
May 8, 1900 |
May 10, 1904 |
Democratic |
|
33 |
Newton C. Blanchard |
|
May 10, 1904 |
May 12, 1908 |
Democratic |
|
34 |
Jared Y. Sanders, Sr. |
|
May 12, 1908 |
May 14, 1912 |
Democratic |
[22] |
35 |
Luther E. Hall |
|
May 14, 1912 |
May 9, 1916 |
Democratic |
|
36 |
Ruffin G. Pleasant |
|
May 9, 1916 |
May 11, 1920 |
Democratic |
|
37 |
John M. Parker |
|
May 11, 1920 |
May 13, 1924 |
Democratic |
|
38 |
Henry L. Fuqua |
|
May 13, 1924 |
October 11, 1926 |
Democratic |
[4] |
39 |
Oramel H. Simpson |
|
October 11, 1926 |
May 21, 1928 |
Democratic |
[16] |
40 |
Huey Pierce Long |
|
May 21, 1928 |
January 25, 1932 |
Democratic |
[23][24] |
41 |
Alvin Olin King |
|
January 25, 1932 |
May 10, 1932 |
Democratic |
[16][25] |
42 |
Oscar Kelly (O.K.) Allen |
|
May 10, 1932 |
January 28, 1936 |
Democratic |
[4] |
43 |
James A. Noe |
|
January 28, 1936 |
May 12, 1936 |
Democratic |
[16] |
44 |
Richard W. Leche |
|
May 12, 1936 |
June 26, 1939 |
Democratic |
[26] |
45 |
Earl K. Long |
|
June 26, 1939 |
May 14, 1940 |
Democratic |
[16] |
46 |
Sam H. Jones |
|
May 14, 1940 |
May 9, 1944 |
Democratic |
|
47 |
Jimmie H. Davis |
|
May 9, 1944 |
May 11, 1948 |
Democratic |
|
|
Earl K. Long |
|
May 11, 1948 |
May 13, 1952 |
Democratic |
|
48 |
Robert F. Kennon |
|
May 13, 1952 |
May 8, 1956 |
Democratic |
|
|
Earl K. Long |
|
May 8, 1956 |
May 10, 1960 |
Democratic |
|
|
Jimmie H. Davis |
|
May 10, 1960 |
May 12, 1964 |
Democratic |
|
49 |
John J. McKeithen |
|
May 12, 1964 |
May 2, 1972 |
Democratic |
[27] |
50 |
Edwin W. Edwards |
|
May 9, 1972 |
March 10, 1980 |
Democratic |
|
51 |
David C. Treen |
|
March 10, 1980 |
March 12, 1984 |
Republican |
|
|
Edwin W. Edwards |
|
March 12, 1984 |
March 14, 1988 |
Democratic |
|
52 |
Charles E. (Buddy) Roemer III |
|
March 14, 1988 |
August 1991 |
Democratic |
|
|
Charles E. (Buddy) Roemer III |
August 1991 |
January 13, 1992 |
Republican |
[28] |
|
Edwin W. Edwards |
|
January 13, 1992 |
January 8, 1996 |
Democratic |
|
53 |
Murphy J. (Mike) Foster, Jr. |
|
January 8, 1996 |
January 12, 2004 |
Republican |
|
54 |
Kathleen Babineaux Blanco |
|
January 12, 2004 |
January 14, 2008 |
Democratic |
|
55[29] |
Piyush "Bobby" Jindal |
|
January 14, 2008 |
Incumbent |
Republican |
|
Other high offices held
This is a table of congressional, other governorships, and other federal offices held by governors. All representatives and senators mentioned represented Louisiana except where noted. * denotes those offices which the governor resigned to take.
Living former governors
As of October 2009[update], four former governors were alive, the oldest being Edwin W. Edwards (1972–1980, 1984–1988, 1992–1996, born 1927). The most recent governor to die was David C. Treen (1980–1984), on October 29, 2009.
Notes
- ^ Table includes both Union and Confederate governors.
- ^ Resigned to take a seat on the United States District Court for the District of Louisiana.
- ^ a b As president of the state senate, acted as governor for unexpired term.
- ^ a b c d Died in office.
- ^ As president of the state senate, acted as governor until his senate president term expired.
- ^ Governor Allen was removed from office and fled to Mexico after the Union took control of Louisiana following the surrender of the Confederacy.
- ^ Resigned to take a seat in the United States Senate, but was denied his seat, Louisiana having not yet been readmitted to the Union.
- ^ LOUISIANA.; Removal of Gov. Wells and Appointment of THomas J. Durant as Governor of Louisiana--The Levee Commissioners and Gen. Sheridan's Reason's for Removing Them.
- ^ As lieutenant governor, acted as governor for unexpired term.
- ^ Removed from office by General Phillip Sheridan, who held Wells accountable for the unstable political conditions stemming from the granting of suffrage to blacks.
- ^ The Executive documents of the House Of Representatives for the First Session of the Fortieth Congress, 1867
- ^ a b Appointed military governor.
- ^ Resigned.
- ^ Removed from power; when Louisiana was readmitted to the Union, Governor Baker and General Winfield Scott Hancock, who appointed him, were removed from power in the state.
- ^ Impeached but never convicted; however, Warmoth was still removed from office with 35 days remaining in his term. All charges were later expunged.
- ^ a b c d e As lieutenant governor, acted as governor for unexpired term.
- ^ a b The State Returning Board declared John McEnery the winner over William Kellogg in 1872, but a second election board was formed that declared Kellogg the winner. Both men were sworn in to office on the same day by opposing legislatures. After armed skirmishes erupted, President Ulysses S. Grant stepped in, declaring Kellogg the winner on September 20, 1873.
- ^ Packard was the Radical Republican candidate for governor in 1876. In a disputed outcome, both Packard and his Democratic opponent, Francis T. Nicholls were inaugurated. Nicholls had led in the balloting by some eight thousand votes, but the Republican-controlled State Returning Board cited fraud and declared Packard the victor. Pinchback, however, refused to support Packard and endorsed Nicholls.
- ^ Francis Nicholls won the 1876 election over Stephen B. Packard, but the Republican-controlled State Returning Board declared Packard the winner. Nicholls took office anyway, and assembled a government that was eventually recognized by the federal government as the proper state government.
- ^ As lieutenant governor, acted as governor for unexpired term, and was later elected in his own right.
- ^ Foster's 1896 reelection was characterized by widespread voting fraud which benefited his candidacy. A temporarilly rejuvenated Republican Party united with the Populists behind the candidacy of John N. Pharr and likely won more than the 43 percent attributed to Pharr in the official returns. Foster quickly maneuvered to adopt the state constitution of 1898, which effectively disenfranchised Blacks and induced several decades of one-party Democratic control via White primaries, the winning of which was tantamount to election. See also Regular Democratic Organization and Solid South.
- ^ Elected to the United States Senate but refused the seat, preferring to remain governor.
- ^ Impeached on charges of bribery and corruption, but not convicted.
- ^ Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States Senate; Governor Long was elected to the Senate in 1930, but did not take office until 1932, preferring to remain in office as governor.
- ^ Paul N. Cyr was lieutenant governor under Governor Huey Long, and stated he would take over for governor after Long left for the Senate, but Long demanded Cyr forfeit his office. Alvin Olin King, as president of the state senate, was elevated to lieutenant governor and later governor.
- ^ Resigned due to a fraud scandal; he was later convicted of mail fraud, and served five years in prison. He was pardoned by President Harry S. Truman in 1953.
- ^ First Louisiana governor elected to consecutive terms after 1921 constitution was amended in 1966 to allow governors to serve two consecutive terms.
- ^ Ibid. Roemer switched from Democrat to Republican several days before the Republicans held a convention in Lafayette to endorse a candidate. Roemer was unable to cancel the convention or to stop its momentum toward U.S. Representative Clyde C. Holloway, who received the endorsement. Both Holloway and Roemer remained in the race, but neither attracted sufficient votes to place in the runoff election.
- ^ "Jindal sworn in as governor". Times Picayune. January 14, 2008. http://www.nola.com/news/index.ssf/2008/01/jindal_sworn_in_as_governor.html. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
- ^ Compilation of Senate Election Cases from 1789 to 1885 - Pages 483 - 512
External links
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† - No official residence ‡ - Non residential
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