Harvey Cloyd Philpott

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Harvey Cloyd Philpott

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Virginia, United States
Death: August 19, 1961 (52)
Place of Burial: Lexington, Davidson County, North Carolina, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Benjamin Cabell Philpott, Sr. and Daisy Philpott
Husband of Frances Adelaide Philpott
Father of Private; Private and Private

Occupation: furniture manufacturer, politician - Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Harvey Cloyd Philpott

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvey_Cloyd_Philpott

Harvey Cloyd Philpott (April 6, 1909 – August 19, 1961) was the 24th Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina in 1961 serving under Governor Terry Sanford.

Philpott, a onetime member of the North Carolina House of Representatives, was elected as a Democrat to a four-year term as Lieutenant Governor in 1960, but he died only eight months into his term, on August 18, 1961. As the North Carolina Constitution does not provide for filling a vacancy in the office, it remained vacant until after the 1964 general election. The Lt. Governor's primary responsibility, presiding over the North Carolina Senate, fell to the President pro tempore.

In his short time in office, Cloyd Philpott was a key ally in the legislature for Governor Terry Sanford. According to Sanford biographer Marion Ellis, they "came from different worlds, but the two had grown close during the fall 1960 campaign.

Philpott was a Lexington furniture manufacturer who was well respected in the state's business community. Before Philpott announced his own plans for public office, Sanford had considered him a possible manager for his campaign. He was a warm, friendly, unpretentious man who wore his thinning hair trimmed in a crew cut."

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http://www.ncpedia.org/biography/philpott-harvey-cloyd

Harvey Cloyd Philpott, manufacturer, legislator, and lieutenant governor, was born in Bassett, Va., the son of Benjamin Cabell, Sr., and Daisy Hundley Philpott. The family moved to Lexington, N.C., in 1920, when the elder Philpott purchased a bankrupt furniture plant. As a young man, Cloyd helped his father in the family business and attended Lexington High School. He also attended Eastman Business College and was graduated from Virginia Military Institute in 1929. Entering the furniture business, he became president and chairman of the board of the United Furniture Corporation and of the Philpott Furniture Corporation of Lexington. As a member of the Southern Furniture Manufacturer's Association, he served a term as its president. In 1956 he was named Furniture Man of the Year at the American Furniture Mart.

Philpott once stated that his interest in politics began with his election in 1934 to the Lexington School Board, where he served until 1945; he was chairman of the board from 1943 to 1945. During all of these years he demonstrated concern for the promotion of education throughout the state. He was a trustee of Wake Forest College and chairman of the Committee of One Hundred for the development of Campbell College.

During the period 1945–49 he was mayor of Lexington and from 1949 to 1956 he was a member of the Lexington Utilities Committee. He also served on the board of directors of the Commercial Bank of Lexington and the Mutual Savings and Loan Association in Lexington. In 1953 he was elected to the state house of representatives, in which he served until 1959. In the house he was a member of the Pearsall Committee and chairman (1958) of the Commission on the Reorganization of State Government. Though conscious of the business interests in the state, Philpott was not a strict conservative and was known in the General Assembly as a man who voted his convictions. He was instrumental in the enactment of the state minimum wage law, though business urged its defeat.

In November 1960 Philpott was elected lieutenant governor, defeating the Republican candidate by more than 230,000 votes. He died in office at age fifty-two and was buried in Forest Hill Memorial Park, Lexington.

In 1931 Philpott married Frances Adelaide Thompson of Lexington, and they became the parents of two daughters, Kathleen (Mrs. Harry V. Anderson, Jr.) and Betty Joe, and a son, Harvey Cloyd, Jr.

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Harvey Cloyd Philpott's Timeline

1909
April 6, 1909
Virginia, United States
1961
August 19, 1961
Age 52
????
Forest Hill Memorial Park, Lexington, Davidson County, North Carolina, United States