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Stephen McNichols

American politician


American politician

FieldValue
nameStephen McNichols
imageStephen McNichols 1962.jpg
officeChair of the National Governors Association
term_startJune 26, 1960
term_endJune 25, 1961
predecessorJ. Caleb Boggs
successorWesley Powell
order135th Governor of Colorado
lieutenant1Frank L. Hays
Robert Lee Knous
term_start1January 8, 1957
term_end1January 8, 1963
predecessor1Edwin C. Johnson
successor1John Arthur Love
office234th Lieutenant Governor of Colorado
governor2Edwin C. Johnson
term_start2January 11, 1955
term_end2January 8, 1957
predecessor2Gordon L. Allott
successor2Frank L. Hays
birth_nameStephen Lucid Robert McNichols
birth_date
birth_placeDenver, Colorado, U.S.
death_date
death_placeDenver, Colorado, U.S.
resting_placeMount Olivet Cemetery
Wheat Ridge, Colorado
spouseMajory Hart
children5
partyDemocratic
educationRegis University (BA)
Catholic University (LLB)
allegianceUnited States
branchUnited States Coast Guard
battlesWorld War II

Robert Lee Knous Wheat Ridge, Colorado Catholic University (LLB) Stephen Lucid Robert McNichols (March 7, 1914 – November 25, 1997) was an American politician who served as the 35th Governor of Colorado from 1957 to 1963.

Family roots and early life

McNichols's father, William H. McNichols, Denver's well-respected auditor for over thirty years, was influential in steering his two sons Bill and Stephen toward their success in state politics. Stephen McNichols graduated from East Denver High School and Regis College to pursue a law degree from Catholic University in Washington. After graduating in 1939, he joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a field officer in Baltimore and Boston. After a year of service, McNichols returned home to assist the Denver District Attorney, John A. Carroll. He later became an assistant in the U.S. Attorney General's antitrust division in Denver.

Marriage and service in World War II

In 1942, McNichols married Marjory Hart. The couple had five children, Stephen, Robert, William,{{efn|William went on to become a Jesuit priest, artist, and poet who ministered to those with AIDS.

Service in the Colorado State Senate

Less than ten years after receiving his law degree McNichols opened his own law firm McNichols, Dunn & Nevans and was elected to the state senate. As a senator McNichols soon became recognized as a skilled planner and was respected for his ability to cross party lines to achieve his goals. During his two terms he was instrumental in developing a plan for long-range highway development, a school district reorganization proposal, and a scheme to centralize public utility management.

Lieutenant Governor of Colorado

McNichols's abilities to plan and pass legislation were rewarded in 1954 when he was elected as Edwin Johnson's lieutenant governor. When Governor Johnson was ill, which was much of the time during this administration, McNichols learned under this period the daily responsibilities of the governorship.

Governor of Colorado

McNichols took over the responsibilities of governor when Edwin Johnson became ill and was unable to complete his term. It was this experience that helped McNichols to be elected Colorado's governor in 1956. The term was 2 years and McNichols was re-elected in 1958 and again in 1960.

Controversial activism and far-reaching plans distinguished McNichols's administration. As governor McNichols championed an improved system of school financial aid distribution and successfully lobbied for an increased university faculty salary cap. McNichols also advocated institutional reform for the State Hospital in Pueblo and State Penitentiary in Cañon City, both organizations fraught with corruption and aging structures. McNichols pushed public works projects securing federal funding for his long-range highway development program and seeing that the Fryingpan–Arkansas water development project was begun. He was also instrumental in the development of the Colorado State Archives and the governorship grew from a two to a four-year term during his administration.

To pass this tremendous package of legislation McNichols often alienated members of his own Democratic Party, and to pay for it he lobbied for an unpopular tax hike. Furthermore, McNichols's Fryingpan–Arkansas water diversion project caused friction between the Western Slope and Front Range regions. Another source of contention was McNichols's acceptance of the Executive Residence from the Boettcher Foundation. Many legislators disagreed with this decision and believed that it showed McNichols to be arrogant and power-hungry. Ironically, the same package of legislation that got him elected to the governorship in 1956 brought him defeat in his 1962 reelection campaign.

Later life and death

McNichols's defeat at the polls continued with an unsuccessful bid for the U.S. Senate in 1968, serving as a Democratic National Committee member, or as the Rocky Mountain Regions U.S. Commerce Director in 1977.

His public service came to an end on November 25, 1997, when he died due to heart failure. Governor Roy Romer noted about McNichols, "I served in the state legislature during his tenure as governor and remember well his character, unique style and commitment to Colorado...He was one of our best governors, in an important time in our history."

Notes

References

References

  1. (December 20, 2019). "Meet the gay priest who served AIDS patients with Mass, prayers and art". [[America (magazine).
  2. Hector Gutierrez, "Steve McNichols Dies at 83: Governor from 1957 to 1963 succumbs to heart attack at hospital," ''Rocky Mountain News,'' 26 November 1997, p. 8A.
  3. Fred Brown, "Ex-governor McNichols dies at 83," ''Denver Post,'' 26 November 1997, p. B1.
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