
Objective
This project brings together the governors of the state of Connecticut.
For the period before Connecticut declared independence in 1776, refer to the Colonial Governors of Connecticut project.
Background
Connecticut was one of the original Thirteen Colonies and was admitted as a state on January 9, 1788. Before it declared its independence, Connecticut was a colony of the Kingdom of Great Britain. Like most early states, Connecticut had claims to western areas, but did not cede all of its claims during the formation of the country like the other states. It maintained its Western Reserve until 1800, at which time it was reassigned to the Northwest Territory.
The current Constitution of Connecticut, ratified in 1965, calls for a four-year term for the governor, commencing on the Wednesday after the first Monday in the January following an election. The previous constitution of 1818 originally had only a one-year term for governor; this was increased to two years in 1875, and four years in 1948. The 1875 amendment also set the start date of the term to its current date; before then, it was the first Wednesday in the May following an election. The constitution provides for the election of a lieutenant governor for the same term as the governor. The two offices are elected on the same ticket; this provision was added in 1962. In the event of a vacancy in the office of governor, the lieutenant governor becomes governor. Before the adoption of the 1965 constitution, the lieutenant governor only acted as governor. There is no limit of any kind on the number of terms one may serve.
Connecticut did not create a state constitution for itself until several decades after it became a state; until 1818, the state operated under the provisions of its colonial charter. The charter called for the election of a governor every year, but not more than once every two years, with the term commencing on the second Thursday in May.
List of Governors of Connecticut
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Governors_of_Connecticut
Governors of the State of Connecticut
Connecticut declared independence in 1776. At that time, the state chose to continue the prior numbering of governors from the colonial period, making the first state governor numbered 16.
- 16th Jonathan Trumbull
- 17th Matthew Griswold
- 18th Samuel Huntington
- 19th Oliver Wolcott
- 20th Jonathan Trumbull, Jr.
- 21st John Treadwell
- 22nd Roger Griswold
- 23rd John Cotton Smith
- 24th Oliver Wolcott Jr.
- 25th Gideon Tomlinson
- 26th John Samuel Peters
- 27th Henry W. Edwards
- 28th Samuel A. Foot
- 29th Henry W. Edwards
- 30th William W. Ellsworth
- 31st Chauncey Fitch Cleveland
- 32nd Roger Sherman Baldwin
- 33rd Isaac Toucey
- 34th Clark Bissell
- 35th Joseph Trumbull
- 36th Thomas H. Seymour
- 37th Charles H. Pond
- 38th Henry Dutton
- 39th William T. Minor
- 40th Alexander H. Holley
- 41st William Alfred Buckingham
- 42nd Joseph Roswell Hawley
- 43rd James E. English
- 44th Marshall Jewell
- 45th James E. English
- 46th Marshall Jewell
- 47th Charles Roberts Ingersoll
- 48th Richard D. Hubbard
- 49th Charles B. Andrews
- 50th Hobart B. Bigelow
- 51st Thomas M. Waller
- 52nd Henry Baldwin Harrison
- 53rd Phineas C. Lounsbury
- 54th Morgan G. Bulkeley
- 55th Luzon B. Morris
- 56th Owen Vincent Coffin
- 57th Lorrin A. Cooke
- 58th George E. Lounsbury
- 59th George P. McLean
- 60th Abiram Chamberlain
- 61st Henry Roberts
- 62nd Rollin S. Woodruff
- 63rd George L. Lilley
- 64th Frank B. Weeks
- 65th Simeon E. Baldwin
- 66th Marcus H. Holcomb
- 67th Everett J. Lake
- 68th Charles A. Templeton
- 69th Hiram Bingham III
- 70th John H. Trumbull
- 71st Wilbur Lucius Cross
- 72nd Raymond E. Baldwin
- 73rd Robert A. Hurley
- 74th Raymond E. Baldwin
- 75th Charles Wilbert Snow
- 76th James L. McConaughy
- 77th James C. Shannon
- 78th Chester B. Bowles
- 79th John Davis Lodge
- 80th Abraham A. Ribicoff
- 81st John N. Dempsey
- 82nd Thomas Meskill
- 83rd Ella Grasso
- 84th William A. O'Neill
- 85th Lowell Weicker
- 86th John G. Rowland
- 87th Jodi Rell
- 88th Dannel Malloy
- 89th Ned Lamont