Robert S. Calvert
Robert S. Calvert | |
---|---|
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts | |
In office 1949–1975 | |
Preceded by | George H. Sheppard |
Succeeded by | Bob Bullock |
Personal details | |
Born | Place of birth missing | April 11, 1892
Died | September 1981 Austin, Travis County, Texas |
Residence | Austin, Texas |
Alma mater | Howard Payne Junior College |
Robert S. Calvert (April 11, 1892 - September 1981) was the longest-serving Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, having held that post from 1949 to 1975.
From 1909 to 1910, Calvert attended Baptist-affiliated Howard Payne Junior College in Brownwood, Texas.
In 1948, Calvert ran for the Democratic Party nomination to be Texas' Comptroller of Public Accounts. He was nominated, which in Texas in 1948 was tantamount to election. He served for twenty-six years.
When the African American then State Representative Eddie Bernice Johnson, later a member of the United States House of Representatives, filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in 1973, Calvert said in response, that Johnson was a "nigger woman who doesn't know what she is talking about." The EEOC ruled that racial discrimination could be inferred based on Calvert's response.[1]
In 1972, Randy Pendleton, a former legislator from Andrews in West Texas, unsuccessfully challenged Calvert for renomination.
In 1974, Bob Bullock announced that he would challenge the octogenarian comptroller and promised to reform operations of the office. Bullock was so aggressive that Calvert withdrew from the race, and Bullock was elected to the first of four terms.
Calvert died in Austin in September 1981.
Sources
- ↑ "Black Legislator in Texas moves to impeach official", Jet, October 11, 1973: 10, retrieved December 5, 2009
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by George H. Sheppard |
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts 1949-1975 |
Succeeded by Bob Bullock |