Historical records matching Dan Edward Garvey, Governor
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About Dan Edward Garvey, Governor
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Edward_Garvey
Dan Edward Garvey (June 19, 1886 – February 5, 1974) was the eighth Governor of Arizona from 1948 to 1951.
Early career
Born in Vicksburg, Mississippi, Garvey graduated from St. Aloysius High School and worked for the Illinois Central Railroad. In 1909, he moved to the Arizona Territory to work as a railroad accountant for Randolph Railroad Co., a company later absorbed by the Southern Pacific Railroad. Later, he entered the automobile business, but it failed during the Great Depression.
Political career
Garvey was hired by the Pima County treasurer's office in 1931. He became Pima County treasurer in 1935 and Tucson city treasurer in 1938. Garvey became known throughout Arizona during the next two decades as a dedicated public servant. He moved to Phoenix in 1940 when he was hired as assistant to Secretary of State Harry M. Moore. Upon Moore's death in 1942, Garvey was appointed to succeed him by Governor Sidney P. Osborn.
Garvey assumed the governorship, in accordance with Arizona law, when Osborn died on May 25, 1948. That fall, Garvey won a full term on the Democratic ticket. He presided over one of the largest growth periods in Arizona history between 1948-1951. A large majority of Arizona newcomers were Republicans and Arizona became a bona fide two-party state for the first time. Garvey was defeated in the Democratic primary in 1950 by Ana Frohmiller.
At the end of his elected term as governor, Garvey was appointed Arizona administrator for the federal Reconstruction Finance Corporation. In 1955, Governor Ernest W. McFarland appointed him state examiner, a post he held until his retirement in 1969.
Dan Edward Garvey, Governor's Timeline
1886 |
June 19, 1886
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Vicksburg, Warren, MS, United States
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1974 |
February 5, 1974
Age 87
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Tucson, Pima, AZ, United States
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