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Junius Marion Futrell

30th governor of Arkansas


Summary

30th governor of Arkansas

FieldValue
nameJunius Marion Futrell
imageJunius Marion Futrell.jpg
order130th
office1Governor of Arkansas
term_start1January 10, 1933
term_end1January 12, 1937
lieutenant1William Lee Cazort
predecessor1Harvey Parnell
successor1Carl Edward Bailey
term_start2March 13, 1913
term_end2July 23, 1913
Acting
predecessor2William Kavanaugh Oldham (acting)
successor2George Washington Hays
office3Circuit Court Judge for the Second Judicial District of Arkansas
term_start31922
term_end31933
office4Member of the Arkansas Senate
term41913–1917
office5Member of the Arkansas House of Representatives
term51896–1904
birth_date
birth_placeGreene County, Arkansas, U.S.
death_date
death_placeLittle Rock, Arkansas, U.S.
resting_placeLinwood Cemetery, Paragould, Arkansas
spouseTera A. Smith
professionLawyer, farmer
partyDemocrat
alma_materUniversity of Arkansas School of Law

Acting Junius Marion Futrell (August 14, 1870 – June 20, 1955) was an American attorney who served as the 30th governor of Arkansas from 1933 to 1937, and the acting governor for a short period in 1913. He also served in the Arkansas House of Representatives and Arkansas Senate including as the senate president.

Early life

Futrell was born in Jones Ridge in Greene County in northeastern Arkansas to parents Jepthra and Arminia Levonica Eubanks Futrell. The second of three children, he attended the Arkansas Industrial University, now the University of Arkansas School of Law, from 1892 to 1893. After his sophomore year, he taught school in several Arkansas counties until 1896, marrying Tera A. Smith on September 27, 1893. Futrell also farmed and worked in the timber industry before entering politics.

Career

Futrell was elected to the Arkansas House of Representatives and served from 1896 to 1904. He was elected Circuit Court Clerk from 1906 to 1910.

Futrell was elected to the Arkansas Senate and served from 1913 to 1917. He was the Senate President from 1915 to 1917. While President of the Senate, he served as acting governor for four months in 1913 after Governor Joseph Taylor Robinson resigned.

Futrell was admitted to the bar in Arkansas in 1913 and practiced law in Paragould until his 1922 appointment to the Second Division of the Second Circuit Court. In 1923, he moved to the Twelfth Chancery Circuit.

Futrell was elected to a full term as governor in his own right in the 1932 election and reelected in 1934. In the 1932 general election, Futrell defeated the Republican J. O. Livesay, a lawyer from Foreman, who had also been the gubernatorial nominee against Harvey Parnell in 1930. Livesay finished the race with 8.9 percent of the vote, less than half his percent polled in 1930. Robert A. Diamond, ed., Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections (Washington, D.C., 1975), pp. 399, 486

As governor, he opposed state funding for education beyond the eighth grade, believing the federal government should provide such support.

The Futrell administration established the Arkansas State Planning Board and created the Arkansas Department of Public Welfare. His administration also rescinded prohibition and instituted some legalized gambling.

According to one study, Futrell was Arkansas's "most conservative governor in decades".

After leaving office, Futrell returned to the practice of law.

Death

Futrell died in 1955 in Little Rock and is interred at Linwood Cemetery in Paragould. He had suffered a severe stroke on July 4, 1948. Survivors included two sons and four daughters.

References

References

  1. "Junius Marion Futrell (1870–1955)". The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture.
  2. "Gov. Junius Marion Futrell". National Governors Association.
  3. "Index to Politicians: Little-dog to Livings". politicalgraveyard.com.
  4. "Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture". University of Arkansas.
  5. (2019). "Arkansas A Concise History".
Wikipedia Source

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