LIST OF GOVERNORS OF PENNSYLVANIA

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This is a 'list of Governors of Pennsylvania'. The office of Pennsylvania governor was created by the Pennsylvania Constitution of 1790. Before 1790, those who are listed below had held the office called president of the state Supreme Executive Council, which comprised one member from each county. Between 1874 and 1971, Governors were prohibited from serving two consecutive terms.

Contents
Presidents of the Supreme Executive Council to 1790
Governors since 1790
See also

Presidents of the Supreme Executive Council to 1790




President Term Party Notes
Thomas Wharton Jr. 1777
1778
None
George Bryan 1778 None
Joseph Reed 1778
1781
None
William Moore 1781
1782
None
John Dickinson 1782
1785
None Previously President of Delaware
Benjamin Franklin 1785
1788
None
Thomas Mifflin 1788
1790
None

Governors since 1790


Name Term Party Notes
Thomas Mifflin21 December 179017 December 1799
Thomas McKean17 December 179920 December 1808Democratic-Republican
Simon Snyder20 December 180816 December 1817Democratic-Republican
William Findlay16 December 181719 December 1820Democratic-Republican
Joseph Hiester19 December 182016 December 1823Democratic-Republican
John Andrew Shulze16 December 182315 December 1829Democratic-Republican
George Wolf15 December 182915 December 1835Democratic-Republican
Joseph Ritner15 December 183515 January 1839Anti-Masonic
David Rittenhouse Porter15 January 183921 January 1845DemocraticFirst Governor under Pennsylvania Constitution of 1838
Francis Rawn Shunk21 January 18459 July 1848DemocraticResigned
''Office vacant''[1]9 July 184826 July 1848
William Freame Johnston26 July 184820 January 1852Whig
William Bigler20 January 185216 January 1855Democratic
James Pollock16 January 185519 January 1858Whig
William Fisher Packer19 January 185815 January 1861Democratic
Andrew Gregg Curtin15 January 186115 January 1867Republican
John White Geary15 January 186721 January 1873Republican
John Frederick Hartranft21 January 187321 January 1879RepublicanFirst Governor under Pennsylvania Constitution of 1874
Henry Martin Hoyt21 January 187916 January 1883Republican
Robert Emory Pattison16 January 188318 January 1887Democratic
James Addams Beaver18 January 188720 January 1891Republican
Robert Emory Pattison20 January 189115 January 1895DemocraticSecond administration
Daniel Hartman Hastings15 January 189517 January 1899Republican
William Alexis Stone17 January 189920 January 1903Republican
Samuel Whitaker Pennypacker20 January 190315 January 1907Republican
Edwin Sydney Stuart15 January 190717 January 1911Republican
John Kinley Tener17 January 191119 January 1915Republican
Martin Grove Brumbaugh19 January 191521 January 1919Republican
William Cameron Sproul21 January 191916 January 1923Republican
Gifford Pinchot16 January 192318 January 1927Republican
John Stuchell Fisher18 January 192720 January 1931Republican
Gifford Pinchot20 January 193115 January 1935RepublicanSecond administration
George Howard Earle15 January 193517 January 1939Democratic
Arthur Horace James17 January 193919 January 1943Republican
Edward Martin19 January 19433 January 1947RepublicanResigned[2]
John Cromwell Bell, Jr.3 January 194721 January 1947Republican
James Henderson Duff21 January 194716 January 1951Republican
John Sydney Fine16 January 195118 January 1955Republican
George Michael Leader18 January 195520 January 1959Democratic
David Leo Lawrence20 January 195915 January 1963Democratic
William Warren Scranton15 January 196317 January 1967Republican
Raymond Philip Shafer17 January 196719 January 1971Republican
Milton Jerrold Shapp (Shapiro)19 January 197116 January 1979DemocraticFirst Governor under Pennsylvania Constitution of 1968
Richard Lewis "Dick" Thornburgh16 January 197920 January 1987Republican
Robert Patrick Casey[3]20 January 198717 January 1995Democratic
Thomas Joseph Ridge17 January 19955 October 2001RepublicanResigned[4]
Mark Stephen Schweiker5 October 200121 January 2003RepublicanActing Governor, September 13 through October 5, 2001
Edward Gene Rendell21 January 2003Democratic

1. Following Governor Shunk's resignation due to illness, an interregnum of 17 days occurred before Governor Johnston was sworn in, during which time the office was vacant. Under the state's constitution of the time, the Speaker of the Senate should have become Governor upon Shunk's resignation. Johnston however was not officially notified until six days after Shunk's death (17 days following his resignation).
2. Governor Martin resigned to take a seat in the United States Senate.
3. At 5 a.m. on June 14, 1993, Governor Casey transferred executive authority to Lieutenant Governor Mark Singel, and later that day underwent a heart-liver transplant operation. Singel acted as Governor until Casey resumed the powers and duties of the office on the evening December 13, 1993. Because Casey never officially resigned, however, Singel was only an "acting governor."
4. On September 13, 2001, Governor Ridge was enlisted to aid in national homeland security efforts following the September 11th terrorist attacks, temporarily transferring his powers to Schweiker. He later resigned to accept the position of Director of Homeland Security, which he held until February 1, 2005 (Secretary of Homeland Security).

A number of surnames of governors are used as names of east-west streets in the South Philadelphia section of Philadelphia, the state's largest city. Names used in this manner, from north to south and from earliest to latest service as governor, include Wharton, Reed, Dickinson, Mifflin, McKean, Snyder, Wolf, Ritner, Porter, Shunk, Johnston, Bigler, Pollock, Packer, Curtin, Geary, Hartranft, and Pattison. There is also a street named Moore in South Philadelphia, but not in the appropriate place in the series, and a street named Franklin running north-south. A similar series of streets named for counties in Pennsylvania exists in North Philadelphia. In addition, many of these surnames are used for residence halls at The Pennsylvania State University, particularly in East, South and Pollock Halls (see: http://www.hfs.psu.edu/east/).

See also



State Capitol of Pennsylvania

List of Lieutenant Governors of Colonial Pennsylvania

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