Dolph Briscoe
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| Dolph Briscoe, Jr. | |
| Image:Briscoe-p01.jpg
| |
| 41st Governor of Texas
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|---|---|
| In office January 16 1973 – January 16 1979 | |
| Lieutenant(s) | William P. Hobby, Jr. |
| Preceded by | Preston Smith (D) |
| Succeeded by | William Perry "Bill" Clements, Jr., (R) |
| Born | April 23 1923 Uvalde, Texas |
| Political party | Democratic |
| Spouse | Janey Briscoe |
| Profession | Politician |
Dolph Briscoe, Jr. (born April 23, 1923) is a wealthy Uvalde rancher and businessman who was the Democratic Governor of Texas between 1973 and 1979. He was the last governor to serve a two-year term and the first to serve a four-year term, when the state doubled the length of gubernatorial terms, effective in 1975.
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[edit] Early years
Briscoe graduated from the University of Texas in 1942, where he was a member of the Nu chapter of the Chi Phi Fraternity and Alpha Phi Omega. While at UT, Briscoe was selected a New Man in the Texas Cowboys in the spring of 1940. He then joined the Army, serving in southeast Asia during World War II.
Briscoe was elected to the state legislature in 1949 and served until 1957. He then returned to Uvalde to manage his family's ranch and other businesses. In 1968, Briscoe competed unsuccessfully in the Democratic gubernatorial primary. There was a runoff between the more liberal contender, Don Yarborough of Houston (no relation to U.S. Senator Ralph Yarborough), and Lieutenant Governor Preston Smith of Lubbock. Smith won the runoff and then defeated Republican Paul W. Eggers of Dallas in the general election.
[edit] Political career
In 1972, Briscoe returned to politics, seeking and receiving the Democratic nomination for governor of Texas over incumbent Preston Smith, whose late tenure was marred by the Sharpstown scandal. After he defeated liberal activist Frances "Sissy" Farenthold of Corpus Christi for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in a heated runoff primary, Briscoe narrowly defeated the Republican candidate, State Senator Henry Grover of Houston, in the November 1972 general election. The final tally was 1,633,493 (47.9 percent) for Briscoe and 1,533,986 (45 percent) for Grover. The Hispanic candidate, 29-year-old Ramsey Muñiz, received 214,118 votes (6 percent), nearly all believed to have been at Briscoe's expense.
As governor, he focused on the maintenance and efficiency of existing government agencies as opposed to the creation of new ones. As a veteran rancher, Briscoe also worked to help the farmers and ranchers of the state during his tenure. This included the eradication of the screw worm on both sides of the Rio Grande River.
In the 1974 general election — the first for a four-year term in Texas since 1873 — Briscoe defeated the Republican nominee, former Lubbock Mayor Jim Granberry, by a wide margin, 1,016,334 to 514,725 in a heavily Democratic year. There were also 93,295 votes for the Hispanic La Raza candidate and another some 30,000 for other minor candidates.
In 1974 and 1975, Briscoe undercut two attempts to write a new constitution for the state of Texas. He said that the proposals before the legislature, acting as a constitutional convention in 1974, and later, in 1975, before the voters, would cause expansion of government and weaken the executive branch, already considered too weak by most political scientists.
Briscoe was defeated in the Democratic primary in 1978 by former Chief Justice John L. Hill, who was in turn very narrowly defeated in the general election for Texas governorship by Republican Bill Clements.
Briscoe has won many political and civic awards over the years, including the designation of "Mr. South Texas" in Laredo. He is the largest individual landowner in Texas.[citation needed] Briscoe has recently donated a large sum of money to the Witte Museum in San Antonio.
[edit] Election history
[edit] 1972
| Texas general election, 1972: Governor[1] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
| Democratic | Dolph Briscoe | 1,633,493 | 47.91 | ||
| Republican | Henry Grover | 1,533,986 | 44.99 | ||
| Raza Unida | Ramsey Muñiz | 214,118 | 6.28 | ||
| Majority | 99,507 | 2.92 | |||
| Turnout | [2]3,409,591 | 100.00 | |||
| Democratic hold | |||||
[edit] References
| Preceded by Britton T. Edwards | Member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 77 (Uvalde) 1949–1953 | Succeeded by A. J. Bishop, Jr. |
| Preceded by Ligon L. Holstein | Member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 79 (Uvalde) 1953–1957 | Succeeded by Jack Richardson |
| Preceded by Preston Smith | Governor of Texas 1973–1979 | Succeeded by Bill Clements |
Governors of Texas | |
|---|---|
| J. P. Henderson • Wood • Bell • J. W. Henderson • Pease • Runnels • Houston • Clark • Lubbock • Murrah • Hamilton • Throckmorton • Pease • Davis • Coke • Hubbard • Roberts • Ireland • Ross • Hogg • Culberson • Sayers • Lanham • Campbell • Colquitt • J. Ferguson • Hobby • Neff • M. Ferguson • Moody • Sterling • M. Ferguson • Allred • O'Daniel • Stevenson • Jester • Shivers • Daniel • Connally • Smith • Briscoe • Clements • White • Clements • Richards • Bush • Perry | |
Categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since March 2007 | Governors of Texas | Members of the Texas House of Representatives | 1923 births | Living people | American military personnel of World War II | People from Austin, Texas | University of Texas at Austin alumni | American ranchers | Texas Democrats

