29th Oklahoma Legislature
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29th Oklahoma Legislature | |
---|---|
Leadership | |
President of the Senate: | Leo Winters, (D) |
President Pro Tem of the Senate: | Roy C. Boecher, (D) |
Speaker of the House: | J.D. McCarty, (D) |
Composition: |
Senate 38 6 House 95 24 |
The Twenty-ninth Oklahoma Legislature was a meeting of the legislative branch of the government of Oklahoma, composed of the Oklahoma Senate and the Oklahoma House of Representatives. The state legislature met in regular session at the Oklahoma State Capitol in Oklahoma City from January 8 to June 14, 1963, during the first term of Governor Henry Bellmon.[1] This was the last state legislature with members representing counties under the old system of districting; a new system was created by a court order that forced Oklahoma to equalize representation.[2]
Dates of session
- January 8-June 14, 1963[1]
Previous: 28th Legislature • Next: 30th Legislature
Party composition
Senate
Affiliation | Party (Shading indicates majority caucus) |
Total | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Republican | |||
38 | 6 | 44 | ||
Voting share | 86.4% | 13.6% |
Senate
Affiliation | Party (Shading indicates majority caucus) |
Total | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Republican | |||
95 | 24 | 119 | ||
Voting share | 79.8% | 20.2% |
Leadership
Democratic leadership
- President of the Senate: Lieutenant Governor Leo Winters[3]
- President Pro Tem of the Senate: Roy C. Boecher
- Speaker of the House: J.D. McCarty[1]
- Speaker Pro Tempore: Rex Privett[1]
- Majority Floor Leader: Leland Wolf[1]
Republican leadership
- Minority Leader: C.W. Doornbos[1]
Members
Senate
Name | District | Party |
---|---|---|
Leon B. Field | 1 | Dem |
Arthur G. McComas | 2 | Dem |
S. S. McColgin | 2 | Dem |
G. O. Williams | 3 | Rep |
Basil R. Wilson | 4 | Dem |
Ryan Kerr | 5 | Dem |
Ed Berrong | 6 | Dem |
Byron Dacus | 6 | Dem |
Roy Schoeb | 7 | Rep |
Richard Romang | 8 | Rep |
Roy E. Grantham | 9 | Dem |
Robert H. Breeden | 10 | Rep |
Robert M. Murphy | 11 | Dem |
Louis Ritzhaupt | 12 | Dem |
Ralph Graves | 13 | Dem |
Boyd Cowden | 13 | Dem |
Jean Pazoureck | 14 | Dem |
Cleeta John Rogers | 14 | Dem |
Walt Allen | 15 | Dem |
Don Baldwin | 15 | Dem |
Roy C. Boecher | 16 | Dem |
Harold Garvin | 17 | Dem |
Fred Harris | 17 | Dem |
Tom Tipps | 18 | Dem |
Hal Muldrow | 19 | Dem |
Glen Ham | 19 | Dem |
J. H. Belvin | 20 | Dem |
Clem Hamilton | 21 | Dem |
Alfred Stevenson | 22 | Dem |
Allen G. Nichols | 23 | Dem |
Leroy McClendon | 24 | Dem |
Gene Stipe | 25 | Dem |
Charles Colston | 26 | Dem |
Bill Haworth | 27 | Dem |
Wilford Bohannon | 27 | Dem |
Ray Fine | 28 | Dem |
John C. Wilkerson | 29 | Dem |
Robert Llolar | 30 | Dem |
Dewey Bartlett | 31 | Rep |
Tom Payne | 32 | Dem |
Clem McSpadden | 33 | Dem |
Denzil Garrison | 34 | Rep |
Bob Trent | 35 | Dem |
Joe Bailey Cobb | 36 | Dem |
- Table based on 2005 Oklahoma Almanac.[4]
House of Representatives
Name | Party | County |
---|---|---|
Bill Harper | Dem | Adair |
Scott Tuxhorn | Rep | Alfalfa |
Harold Thomas | Dem | Atoka |
Merle Lansden | Dem | Beaver |
Homer Holcomb | Dem | Beckham |
James Burnham | Dem | Blaine |
John Massey | Dem | Bryan |
Pauline Tabor | Dem | Bryan |
Robert Goodfellow | Dem | Caddo |
James Kardokus | Dem | Caddo |
Paul Liebmann | Dem | Canadian |
Ralph Watkins | Dem | Canadian |
Raymond Hammer | Dem | Carter |
Burke Mordy | Dem | Carter |
William Willis | Dem | Cherokee |
Lucien Spear | Dem | Choctaw |
Carl Etling | Rep | Cimarron |
Jack Odom | Dem | Cleveland |
Leland Wolf | Dem | Cleveland |
Ralph Hamilton | Dem | Cleveland |
Herman Baumert | Dem | Coal |
Donald Beauchamp | Dem | Comanche |
Walter Hutchins | Dem | Comanche |
Jim Taliaferro | Dem | Comanche |
Alfred Thomas | Dem | Comanche |
Tracy Daugherty | Dem | Cotton |
Harold Morgan | Dem | Craig |
Heber Finch Jr. | Dem | Creek |
William Shibley | Dem | Creek |
M.A. Diel | Dem | Custer |
Wiley Sparkman | Dem | Delaware |
Jack Harrison | Dem | Ellis |
James Gungoll | Rep | Garfield |
Harold Hunter | Rep | Garfield |
Bert Page | Dem | Garfield |
W.W. Burnett | Dem | Garvin |
Tom Strickland | Dem | Garvin |
Spencer Bernard | Dem | Grady |
John A. Lance | Dem | Grady |
Lynn Thornhill | Rep | Grant |
Elmo Hurst | Dem | Greer |
James Fowler | Dem | Harmon |
Clayton Lauer | Rep | Harper |
Earl Bilyeu | Dem | Haskell |
Stona Fitch | Dem | Hughes |
Larry Derryberry | Dem | Jackson |
Guy Horton | Dem | Jackson |
Bill Bradley | Dem | Jefferson |
Clarence Robertson Jr. | Dem | Johnston |
James Burger | Dem | Kay |
Brian Conaghan | Rep | Kay |
Ray Lewis Davis | Rep | Kay |
Milton Priebe | Rep | Kingfisher |
William Metcalf | Dem | Kiowa |
Jim Cook | Dem | Latimer |
Tom Traw | Dem | LeFlore |
Ralph Vandiver | Dem | LeFlore |
Barbour Cox | Dem | Lincoln |
Dick Fogarty | Dem | Logan |
Willard Willis | Dem | Love |
Art Bower | Rep | Major |
Delmas Northcutt | Dem | Marshall |
J.W. Bynum | Dem | Mayes |
Norman A. Smith | Dem | McClain |
Garfield Settles | Dem | McCurtain |
Mort Welch | Dem | McCurtain |
Martin Odom | Dem | McIntosh |
Carl Williams | Dem | Murray |
Bill Bull | Dem | Muskogee |
Russell Ruby | Dem | Muskogee |
Max Rust | Dem | Muskogee |
Henry Dolezal | Rep | Noble |
Bill Shipley | Dem | Nowata |
Harlon Avey | Dem | Okfuskee |
Red Andrews | Dem | Oklahoma |
Bryce Baggett | Dem | Oklahoma |
G.T. Blankenship | Rep | Oklahoma |
George Keyes | Dem | Oklahoma |
J.D. McCarty | Dem | Oklahoma |
Jack Skaggs | Dem | Oklahoma |
Thomas Taggart | Rep | Oklahoma |
Ed Cole | Dem | Okmulgee |
Tommie Yates | Dem | Okmulgee |
Tom Tate | Dem | Osage |
Virgil Tinker | Dem | Osage |
Pat MsCue | Dem | Ottawa |
Joseph Mountford | Dem | Ottawa |
Rex Privett | Dem | Pawnee |
Jake E. Hesser | Dem | Payne |
H.L. Sparks | Dem | Payne |
Tom McChristian | Dem | Pittsburg |
William Skeith | Dem | Pittsburg |
Lonnie Abbott | Dem | Pontotoc |
Clive Rigsby | Dem | Pontotoc |
John Levergood | Dem | Pottawatomie |
Tom Stevens | Dem | Pottawatomie |
Ray Tucker | Dem | Pushmataha |
Jodie Moad | Dem | Roger Mills |
Bill Briscoe | Dem | Rogers |
Laurence Howze | Dem | Seminole |
Raymond Reed | Dem | Seminole |
Maynard Blackard | Dem | Sequoyah |
Jerome Sullivan Jr. | Dem | Stephens |
Wayne Holden | Dem | Stephens |
George Gear | Rep | Texas |
Frank Patterson | Dem | Tillman |
Timothy Dowd | Rep | Tulsa |
Laurence Gunnison | Rep | Tulsa |
John McCune | Dem | Tulsa |
Joe Musgrave | Rep | Tulsa |
Ralph Rhoades | Rep | Tulsa |
Richard Taylor | Rep | Tulsa |
Douglas Wixson | Rep | Tulsa |
Vol Howard Odom | Dem | Wagoner |
James Connor | Rep | Washington |
Charles Doornbos | Rep | Washington |
Don Greenhaw | Dem | Washita |
A.L. Murrow | Rep | Woods |
William Burkett | Rep | Woodward |
- Table based on database of historic members.[5]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 A Century to Remember, Oklahoma House of Representatives (accessed June 16, 2013)
- ↑ Agnew, Brad. Twentieth-Century Oklahoma, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (accessed May 10, 2013)
- ↑ History of the Lieutenant Governor's Office (accessed June 16, 2013)
- ↑ 2005 Oklahoma Almanac, Oklahoma Department of Libraries. (accessed July 2, 2013)
- ↑ Historic Members, Okhouse.gov (accessed June 17, 2013)
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