LIST_OF_GOVERNORS OF MAINE
(Redirected from Governor of Maine)
This is a 'list of Governors of Maine' since statehood in 1820.
Before Maine became a state, it was part of Massachusetts; see List of Governors of Massachusetts for this period.
1. Resigned to take appointment as a minister to negotiate a treaty with Spain.
2. Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States House of Representatives.
3. Elected to the United States Senate.
4. Edward Kent won a close election, but Democrats challenged the election. He was finally declared winner by the state supreme court and sworn in on January 19 1838.
5. Burton Cross had been elected to the governorship, but his senate term ended 25 hours before his term as governor began; therefore, he could not act as governor for that day.
6. Governor Baldacci's term expires in 2011; he is term limited.
This is a table of congressional and other federal offices held by governors. All representatives and senators mentioned represented Maine except where noted.
★ denotes those offices which the governor resigned to take.
As of August 2007, five former governors were alive, the oldest being John H. Reed (1959–1967, born 1921). The most recent governor to die was Burton M. Cross (1952–1953, 1953–1955), on October 22 1998. The most recently-serving governor to die was James B. Longley (1975–1979), on August 16 1980.
This is a 'list of Governors of Maine' since statehood in 1820.
Before Maine became a state, it was part of Massachusetts; see List of Governors of Massachusetts for this period.
| Contents |
| Notes |
| Other high offices held |
| Living former governors |
Notes
1. Resigned to take appointment as a minister to negotiate a treaty with Spain.
2. Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States House of Representatives.
3. Elected to the United States Senate.
4. Edward Kent won a close election, but Democrats challenged the election. He was finally declared winner by the state supreme court and sworn in on January 19 1838.
5. Burton Cross had been elected to the governorship, but his senate term ended 25 hours before his term as governor began; therefore, he could not act as governor for that day.
6. Governor Baldacci's term expires in 2011; he is term limited.
Other high offices held
This is a table of congressional and other federal offices held by governors. All representatives and senators mentioned represented Maine except where noted.
★ denotes those offices which the governor resigned to take.
| Name | Gubernatorial term | U.S. Congress | Other offices held | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| House | Senate | |||
| William D. Williamson | 1821 | H | ||
| Albion K. Parris | 1822–1827 | S ★ | U.S. Representative from Massachusetts | |
| Enoch Lincoln | 1827–1829 | H | U.S. Representative from Massachusetts | |
| Robert Dunlap | 1834–1838 | H | ||
| John Fairfield | 1839–1841, 1842–1843 | H | S ★ | |
| Edward Kavanagh | 1843–1844 | H | ||
| Hugh J. Anderson | 1844–1847 | H | ||
| Anson P. Morrill | 1858–1861 | H | ||
| Hannibal Hamlin | 1857 | H | S ★ | Vice President of the United States |
| Lot M. Morrill | 1858–1861 | S | U.S. Secretary of the Treasury | |
| Sidney Perham | 1871–1874 | H | ||
| Nelson Dingley, Jr. | 1874–1876 | H | ||
| Harris M. Plaisted | 1881–1883 | H | ||
| Edwin C. Burleigh | 1889–1893 | H | S | |
| Llewellyn Powers | 1897–1901 | H | ||
| Bert M. Fernald | 1909–1911 | S | ||
| Ralph Owen Brewster | 1925–1929 | H | S | |
| Horace A. Hildreth | 1945–1949 | Ambassador to Pakistan | ||
| Frederick G. Payne | 1949–1952 | S ★ | ||
| Edmund Muskie | 1955–1959 | S ★ | U.S. Secretary of State | |
| Kenneth M. Curtis | 1967–1974 | Ambassador to Canada | ||
| Joseph Brennan | 1979–1987 | H | ||
| John R. McKernan, Jr. | 1987–1995 | H | ||
| John Baldacci | 2003–present | H | ||
Living former governors
As of August 2007, five former governors were alive, the oldest being John H. Reed (1959–1967, born 1921). The most recent governor to die was Burton M. Cross (1952–1953, 1953–1955), on October 22 1998. The most recently-serving governor to die was James B. Longley (1975–1979), on August 16 1980.
| Name | Gubernatorial term | Date of birth |
|---|---|---|
| John H. Reed | 1959–1967 | January 5 1921 |
| Kenneth M. Curtis | 1967–1974 | February 8 1931 |
| Joseph Brennan | 1979–1987 | November 2 1934 |
| John R. McKernan, Jr. | 1987–1995 | May 20 1948 |
| Angus King | 1995–2003 | March 31 1944 |
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