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Charles N. Haskell

Charles Nathaniel Haskell (March 13, 1860 – July 5, 1933) was an American lawyer, oilman, and politician who was the first governor of Oklahoma.[1] As a delegate to Oklahoma's constitutional convention in 1906, he played a crucial role in drafting the Oklahoma Constitution and gaining Oklahoma's admission into the United States as the 46th state in 1907. A prominent businessman in Muskogee, he helped the city grow in importance. He represented the city as a delegate in both the 1906 Oklahoma convention and an earlier convention in 1905 that was a failed attempt to create a U.S. state of Sequoyah.

Charles Nathaniel Haskell
1st Governor of Oklahoma
In office
November 16, 1907 – January 9, 1911
LieutenantGeorge W. Bellamy
Preceded by
Succeeded byLee Cruce
Treasurer of the Democratic National Committee
In office
July 25, 1908 – September 27, 1908
Preceded byWilliam H. O'Brien
Succeeded byHerman Ridder
Personal details
Born(1860-03-13)March 13, 1860
Leipsic, Ohio
DiedJuly 5, 1933(1933-07-05) (aged 73)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Resting placeMuskogee, Oklahoma
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Lucie Pomeroy Haskell
Lillian Gallup Haskell
ProfessionTeacher, lawyer
Signature

During Oklahoma's constitutional convention, Haskell succeeded in pushing for the inclusion of prohibition and blocking the inclusion of women's suffrage in the Oklahoma Constitution. As governor, he was responsible for moving the state capital to Oklahoma City, establishing schools and state agencies, reforming the territorial prison system, and enforcing prohibition. The constitution prohibited persons from having successive terms in the governor's office. Lee Cruce succeeded Haskell, who returned to his law practice and related business activities. Haskell died of a stroke in 1933.

Early life and education edit

Born in West Leipsic, Ohio on March 13, 1860, Charles Haskell was the son of George R. Haskell, a cooper, who died when the boy was three years old. His widowed mother, Jane H. Haskell (née Reeves), worked for the local Methodist church as a bell ringer and custodian to support her six children.[2]

At the age of 10, Haskell started working as a farm boy for a farmer named Miller in Putnam County, Ohio. He lived and worked there for eight years as he grew into adulthood. Miller was a school teacher, but the young Haskell did not have time to attend school because of his work. Instead, Miller's wife taught him at home, and Haskell earned a teaching certificate at age 17.[citation needed]

Private career edit

Haskell became a schoolteacher at age 18 and taught for three years in Putnam County. After "reading the law" as an apprentice with an established firm, on December 6, 1880, he passed the bar exam. He became a practicing attorney at age 20, setting up his practice in the village of Ottawa, Ohio. In his work as an attorney in Ottawa, he became one of the most successful lawyers in the county seat. He also became prominent in the Democratic Party in northwestern Ohio. In 1888, Haskell started work as a general contractor; for the next 16 years, his business career gave him an understanding of American industrialism. During this time, he lived part of the time in New York City and in San Antonio, Texas.[2]

Marriage and family edit

Haskell married Lucie Pomeroy, daughter of a prominent Ottawa family, on October 11, 1881. Their children were Norman, who became a lawyer in Muskogee, Oklahoma (where the family moved in 1901); Murray, who worked as a bank cashier; and daughter Lucie.[2]

Lucie Pomeroy Haskell died in March 1888.[2] Her widower remarried in 1889, to Lillie Elizabeth Gallup. They also had three children together: Frances, Jane and Joseph.[2]

Move to Muskogee edit

 
Haskell moved to Muskogee, Oklahoma, where he would become a prominent resident.

Following the Land Run of 1889 and passage of the Organic Act in 1890, migration of European Americans to Oklahoma Territory increased dramatically, raising the territory's status on the national scene. Haskell moved his family to Muskogee, the capital of the Creek Nation, in March 1901. When he arrived, Haskell found Muskogee a "dry", sleepy village of some 4,500 people. He built the first five-story business block in the town and in Indian Territory.

Haskell organized and built most of the railroads running into Muskogee. He is said to have built and owned 14 brick buildings in the city. Through his influence, Muskogee developed as a center of business and industry, and its population grew to more than 20,000 inhabitants. He often recounted that he hoped Muskogee would become the "Queen City of the Southwest".

Haskell gained increasing influence in the politics of Indian Territory and drew the attention of the leaders of the Creek Nation. During this time, the Native American nations in Indian Territory were talking of creating a state and joining the Union under the name of the State of Sequoyah. The Creek selected Haskell as their official representative to the conventions, in the position of vice-president for the Five Civilized Tribes, held in Eufaula, Oklahoma in 1902 and Muskogee in 1905.

Of the six delegates at the Muskogee convention, only Haskell and William H. Murray were not of Native American descent. U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt blocked the attempt to create Sequoyah, as he opposed the potential of another Democratic-majority state.

Haskell wrote a large portion of the proposed state's constitution. Although he had publicly worked for a separate state for Indian Territory, privately, he was thrilled to see the Sequoyah proposal defeated. Haskell believed it would force the Indian leaders to join in statehood with Oklahoma Territory.

The United States Congress and President Roosevelt agreed that the Oklahoma and Indian territories had to combine to enter the Union as one state, the State of Oklahoma. After congressional passage of the Enabling Act in 1906, Haskell was elected as a delegate by the largest margin in the new state, representing the seventy-sixth district, which included Muskogee. Traveling to Guthrie and the Oklahoma Constitutional convention on November 20, 1906, Haskell would meet William H. Murray from the Muskogee convention and Robert L. Williams. Due to their presence at both conventions, Haskell and Murray became lifelong friends.

The delegates to the Guthrie convention included many who had served in the Sequoyah convention. Numerous elements proposed for the new constitution were based upon the Sequoyah constitution. Haskell owned the New State Tribune, and through its editorial columns advocated for the elements he wanted in the new constitution. Most were incorporated, in substance if not in form. While Murray served as the convention's president, delegates recognized Haskell's power in the body. A local newspaper during the time, the Guthrie Report, called Haskell "the power behind the throne".

Haskell had a perfect attendance and voting record during the session. He advocated for provisions that affected both territories’ labor problems, and advocated for representatives of organized labor. Haskell also drafted a report drawing up county boundaries, led the crusade for state prohibition, introduced Jim Crow laws, as were prevalent among Southern states to restrict African Americans to second-class status; and successfully kept female suffrage out of the state constitution.

Gubernatorial campaign edit

 
William Jennings Bryan supported Haskell in his 1907 campaign.

At Tulsa on March 26, 1907, during the recess before the final adoption of the constitution by the convention, Haskell held a large Democratic Party banquet at the Brady Hotel, attended by between 500 and 600 of the leading Democrats of the new state. During this banquet, the first campaigns for governor were formally inaugurated. During this evening, his friends proposed Haskell for the Democratic gubernatorial candidacy. Among the other potential candidates were Thomas Doyle of Perry and Lee Cruce of Ardmore. Haskell, like other prominent Democrats at the time, had the strong support of labor and agriculture leaders.[3]

The party primaries for governor were set for June 8, and Doyle and Cruce had already been campaigning; Haskell had little time. During his campaign, Haskell made 88 speeches in 45 days, and reached nearly every county. The lieutenants of the respective candidates were vigorously working in the school districts and securing support in every community. Haskell's hard-working nature led him to win the Democratic nomination. Haskell won the Democratic primary by a more than 4,000-vote majority. Frank Frantz, the Republican territorial governor, was nominated as the Republican candidate at their caucus at Tulsa.

Frantz was a former Rough Rider and a friend of U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt, who had appointed him. He was a very strong candidate for the Republican party. Haskell challenged Frantz to joint public discussions throughout the state; they discussed every problem facing administration of the new state during the campaign.

In addition, two nationally prominent figures spoke at various locations: Republican presidential nominee William Howard Taft and Democratic presidential nominee William Jennings Bryan. Taft's disapproval of Oklahoma's proposed constitution and his recommendation that the people vote against it seemed to increase support for the Democrats. Haskell won the gubernatorial race by more than 30,000 votes on September 17, 1907.[2] On the same day, the voters ratified the new Oklahoma Constitution.

Governor of Oklahoma edit

 
Governor Haskell as he appeared upon entering office

On November 16, 1907, five minutes after it was known that Oklahoma had officially become a state, Guthrie Leader editor Leslie G. Niblack administered the oath of office to Haskell. The ceremony took place privately in Haskell's hotel apartments in the presence of his immediate family, Robert Latham Owen, United States Senator-elect, and Thomas Owen of Muskogee, Haskell's former political manager. Haskell's inaugural address at Guthrie, delivered on the south steps of the Carnegie Library, quickly lifted him into national prominence.

Haskell's old friends William H. Murray and Robert L. Williams also came into power with the state's founding; with Murray as the state's first Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives and Williams appointed, by Haskell, as the first Oklahoma Supreme Court chief justice. Haskell set the precedents for the use of executive power.

During the 1st Oklahoma Legislature, Haskell delivered a message creating a commission charged with sending a message to the U.S. Congress: amending the United States Constitution to provide for the election of U.S. senators by a direct vote of the people. Although it did not occur until after he left office, his efforts, as well as the works of the Progressive-era leaders, provided for the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1912.

Though Guthrie was the official capital of the state, Haskell set up his administration from Oklahoma City. Oklahoma City quickly grew in industry and prominence, with a booming population of 64,000, shadowing the smaller city of Guthrie, which was located just miles from the growing city. Haskell personally led the move to change the capital from Guthrie to Oklahoma City. First, he moved the official home of the Great Seal of Oklahoma and Oklahoma Constitution. Slowly, all government functions moved to the Oklahoma City area.

 
Theodore Roosevelt would be one of Haskell's fiercest political opponents during his Governorship.

In the state legislature's first session, under Haskell's leadership, Oklahoma adopted laws regulating banking in the state, reformed the old territorial prison system, and protected the public from exploitative railroads, public utilities, trusts and monopolies. Haskell also initiated a law insuring deposits in case of a bank failure, a landmark piece of legislation in the nation. Haskell also rigidly enforced prohibition through the Alcohol Control Act. Though following progressive dogma at every turn, such as the introduction of child labor laws, factory inspection codes, safety codes for mines, health and sanitary laws, and employer's liability for workers, Haskell's legislative schedule also included Jim Crow laws for Oklahoma. Haskell's other significant contributions while governor included establishing the Oklahoma Geological Survey, the Oklahoma School for the Blind, the Oklahoma College for Women and the Oklahoma State Department of Health. In addition, he helped to create the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals in 1908. Haskell selected the first judges of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals.[4]

Prior to statehood, Kansas officials imprisoned individuals convicted of crimes in Oklahoma Territory. Oklahoma Commissioner of Charities and Corrections Kate Barnard, Oklahoma's first female state official, visited the Kansas prisons and reported to Governor Haskell on the horrible conditions. In response, in 1908, Haskell pushed a bill through the state legislature that transferred 50 Oklahoma prisoners detained in the Kansas penitentiary at Lansing to McAlester, Oklahoma. When the Oklahoma state militia marched the prisoners down to McAlester, they found no prison. Under military supervision, the prisoners built Oklahoma State Penitentiary, the state's first correctional facility (still in use today). The militia housed the prisoners in a tent city and were authorized by Haskell to use lethal force against any prisoner that tried to escape.

A grandfather clause was also enacted by the 2nd Oklahoma Legislature by the state's Democratic leaders, effectively excluding blacks from voting. Haskell would spend the remainder of his term enforcing prohibition, regulation of railroads and other trusts, and the moving of the state capital to Oklahoma City. Haskell's dream came true on June 11, 1910, when Oklahoma City became the state's official capital.

Throughout his term as governor, Haskell remained free from corruption. Though he was the leader in the deliberations of the committee on county lines and county seats, when hundreds of towns had committees attending the sessions with heavy purses, he left these deliberations lean and poor, and by the time he retired from the governor's office he had become utterly impoverished. In debate he ignored the graces of oratory and instead marshaled facts, arrayed statistics and piled up figures, using his cutting wit and grim humor to carry his point.

At the end of his term as governor in 1911, Haskell stepped down from the governorship, happy to see his 1907 Democratic primary challenger Lee Cruce inaugurated as the second governor of Oklahoma. In 1912, Haskell unsuccessfully challenged incumbent U.S. Senator Robert Latham Owen in a hard-fought Democratic primary for his U.S. Senate seat.[5]

National politics edit

Not only a powerful figure in Oklahoma politics, Haskell's progressive roots and populist nature granted him national clout. In 1908, Haskell headed the Oklahoma delegation to the National Democratic Convention at Denver where he was appointed treasurer of the Democratic National Committee.[6] He was the spokesman for William Jennings Bryan in writing the platform of the convention. Two months later, he was forced to resign his treasurer position after allegations were leveled against him of taking illegal contributions from the Standard Oil Company.[7][8] In 1920, he again headed the Oklahoma delegation at the National Convention, which in that year met at San Francisco, and was committed to and faithfully labored for United States Senator Robert Latham Owen, of Oklahoma, for the United States presidential nomination. Haskell would serve in this post two more times: a third in 1928 to the National Democratic Convention at Houston, and a fourth time in 1932 to the National Democratic Convention at Chicago.

At each convention and in his speeches and in articles appearing in the public press he disclosed an intimate understanding of the big money masters of America and ruthlessly exposed many of their venal practices and their corrupt usage of the public funds in their own interest to the detriment of the people.

Later life, death and legacy edit

Haskell entered the oil business after finishing his term as governor,[9] a profession he would stay in until the end of his life. In 1933, Haskell suffered a major stroke, from which he would never recover. Three months later Haskell would die from pneumonia. Haskell lost consciousness on July 4, and died the next day, in the Skirvin Hotel in Oklahoma City at the age of 73. He is buried in Muskogee, Oklahoma.[9]

As Oklahoma's first governor, one of his most significant achievements as governor was moving the state capital from Guthrie to Oklahoma City.[citation needed]

Charles Haskell Elementary in Edmond, Oklahoma, and Charles N. Haskell Middle School in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma are named in his honor. Haskell County, Oklahoma and the city of Haskell, Oklahoma are also named for him.

In 2007, Oklahoma celebrated 100 years of statehood. Many descendants of Charles Nathaniel Haskell were in attendance.[citation needed]

Haskell’s legacy is riddled with controversy over his mistreatment and exploitation of Native American people in Oklahoma.

Electoral history edit

1907 Oklahoma gubernatorial election[10]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Charles N. Haskell 134,162 53.5 New
Republican Frank Frantz 106,507 42.5 New
Socialist C.C. Ross 9,740 3.8 New
Democratic gain from Swing N/A
Oklahoma Democratic primary (August 6, 1912)[10]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert L. Owen (Incumbent) 80,204 64.3%
Democratic Charles N. Haskell 44,483 35.6%
Turnout 124,687  

State of the State Speeches edit

Sources edit

  • Short biography of Charles N Haskell April 14, 2011, at the Wayback Machine

References edit

  1. ^ "Haskell, Charles Nathaniel | The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture". Oklahoma Historical Society | OHS. Retrieved August 11, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Compton, J. J. "Haskell, Charles Nathaniel (1860-1933) July 18, 2010, at the Wayback Machine," Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture May 31, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Oklahoma Historical Society. (accessed July 17, 2013)
  3. ^ A Century to Remember September 10, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Oklahoma House of Representatives June 22, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. (accessed July 17, 2013)
  4. ^ Enrolled House Concurrent Resolution No. 25 September 2, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, Chronicles of Oklahoma Vol. 11, No. 3, September, 1933. (accessed July 14, 2013)
  5. ^ Belcher, Wyatt W. (PDF). Chronicles of Oklahoma Vol. 31 (Winter 1953–54) - Oklahoma Historical Society. pp. 361–371. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 6, 2013. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  6. ^ "Mack Is The Choice". The Sunday Star. Vol. 173, no. 17471. July 26, 1908. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ "Ridder Is New Man". The Sunday State Journal. Vol. 39. September 27, 1908. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ "Gov. Haskell Resigns as Bryan's Treasurer". The Burr Oak Herald. Vol. XXIX, no. 42. Burr Oak, Kansas. October 8, 1908. p. 2 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ a b Oklahoma Governors September 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Ok.gov. (accessed July 14, 2013)
  10. ^ a b "1907-1912 Results" (PDF). oklahoma.gov. Oklahoma State Election Board. Retrieved September 23, 2023.

External links edit

  • "Charles Nathaniel Haskell". Oklahoma Governor. Find a Grave. March 31, 2002. Retrieved May 5, 2013.
  • "Oklahoma Governor Charles Nathaniel Haskell". National Governors Association. Retrieved May 5, 2013.
Party political offices
First Democratic nominee for Governor of Oklahoma
1907
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by
Frank Frantz
Territorial Governor
Governor of Oklahoma
1907–1911
Succeeded by
Notes and references
1. The position of Governor of Oklahoma was created under the new Oklahoma Constitution. It replaced the office of Governor of Oklahoma Territory.

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For the namesake of Haskell County Texas see Charles Ready Haskell Charles Nathaniel Haskell March 13 1860 July 5 1933 was an American lawyer oilman and politician who was the first governor of Oklahoma 1 As a delegate to Oklahoma s constitutional convention in 1906 he played a crucial role in drafting the Oklahoma Constitution and gaining Oklahoma s admission into the United States as the 46th state in 1907 A prominent businessman in Muskogee he helped the city grow in importance He represented the city as a delegate in both the 1906 Oklahoma convention and an earlier convention in 1905 that was a failed attempt to create a U S state of Sequoyah Charles Nathaniel Haskell1st Governor of OklahomaIn office November 16 1907 January 9 1911LieutenantGeorge W BellamyPreceded byFrank Frantz as Territorial GovernorSucceeded byLee CruceTreasurer of the Democratic National CommitteeIn office July 25 1908 September 27 1908Preceded byWilliam H O BrienSucceeded byHerman RidderPersonal detailsBorn 1860 03 13 March 13 1860Leipsic OhioDiedJuly 5 1933 1933 07 05 aged 73 Oklahoma City OklahomaResting placeMuskogee OklahomaPolitical partyDemocraticSpouse s Lucie Pomeroy HaskellLillian Gallup HaskellProfessionTeacher lawyerSignatureDuring Oklahoma s constitutional convention Haskell succeeded in pushing for the inclusion of prohibition and blocking the inclusion of women s suffrage in the Oklahoma Constitution As governor he was responsible for moving the state capital to Oklahoma City establishing schools and state agencies reforming the territorial prison system and enforcing prohibition The constitution prohibited persons from having successive terms in the governor s office Lee Cruce succeeded Haskell who returned to his law practice and related business activities Haskell died of a stroke in 1933 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Private career 3 Marriage and family 4 Move to Muskogee 5 Gubernatorial campaign 6 Governor of Oklahoma 7 National politics 8 Later life death and legacy 9 Electoral history 10 State of the State Speeches 11 Sources 12 References 13 External linksEarly life and education editBorn in West Leipsic Ohio on March 13 1860 Charles Haskell was the son of George R Haskell a cooper who died when the boy was three years old His widowed mother Jane H Haskell nee Reeves worked for the local Methodist church as a bell ringer and custodian to support her six children 2 At the age of 10 Haskell started working as a farm boy for a farmer named Miller in Putnam County Ohio He lived and worked there for eight years as he grew into adulthood Miller was a school teacher but the young Haskell did not have time to attend school because of his work Instead Miller s wife taught him at home and Haskell earned a teaching certificate at age 17 citation needed Private career editHaskell became a schoolteacher at age 18 and taught for three years in Putnam County After reading the law as an apprentice with an established firm on December 6 1880 he passed the bar exam He became a practicing attorney at age 20 setting up his practice in the village of Ottawa Ohio In his work as an attorney in Ottawa he became one of the most successful lawyers in the county seat He also became prominent in the Democratic Party in northwestern Ohio In 1888 Haskell started work as a general contractor for the next 16 years his business career gave him an understanding of American industrialism During this time he lived part of the time in New York City and in San Antonio Texas 2 Marriage and family editHaskell married Lucie Pomeroy daughter of a prominent Ottawa family on October 11 1881 Their children were Norman who became a lawyer in Muskogee Oklahoma where the family moved in 1901 Murray who worked as a bank cashier and daughter Lucie 2 Lucie Pomeroy Haskell died in March 1888 2 Her widower remarried in 1889 to Lillie Elizabeth Gallup They also had three children together Frances Jane and Joseph 2 Move to Muskogee editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Haskell moved to Muskogee Oklahoma where he would become a prominent resident Following the Land Run of 1889 and passage of the Organic Act in 1890 migration of European Americans to Oklahoma Territory increased dramatically raising the territory s status on the national scene Haskell moved his family to Muskogee the capital of the Creek Nation in March 1901 When he arrived Haskell found Muskogee a dry sleepy village of some 4 500 people He built the first five story business block in the town and in Indian Territory Haskell organized and built most of the railroads running into Muskogee He is said to have built and owned 14 brick buildings in the city Through his influence Muskogee developed as a center of business and industry and its population grew to more than 20 000 inhabitants He often recounted that he hoped Muskogee would become the Queen City of the Southwest Haskell gained increasing influence in the politics of Indian Territory and drew the attention of the leaders of the Creek Nation During this time the Native American nations in Indian Territory were talking of creating a state and joining the Union under the name of the State of Sequoyah The Creek selected Haskell as their official representative to the conventions in the position of vice president for the Five Civilized Tribes held in Eufaula Oklahoma in 1902 and Muskogee in 1905 Of the six delegates at the Muskogee convention only Haskell and William H Murray were not of Native American descent U S President Theodore Roosevelt blocked the attempt to create Sequoyah as he opposed the potential of another Democratic majority state Haskell wrote a large portion of the proposed state s constitution Although he had publicly worked for a separate state for Indian Territory privately he was thrilled to see the Sequoyah proposal defeated Haskell believed it would force the Indian leaders to join in statehood with Oklahoma Territory The United States Congress and President Roosevelt agreed that the Oklahoma and Indian territories had to combine to enter the Union as one state the State of Oklahoma After congressional passage of the Enabling Act in 1906 Haskell was elected as a delegate by the largest margin in the new state representing the seventy sixth district which included Muskogee Traveling to Guthrie and the Oklahoma Constitutional convention on November 20 1906 Haskell would meet William H Murray from the Muskogee convention and Robert L Williams Due to their presence at both conventions Haskell and Murray became lifelong friends The delegates to the Guthrie convention included many who had served in the Sequoyah convention Numerous elements proposed for the new constitution were based upon the Sequoyah constitution Haskell owned the New State Tribune and through its editorial columns advocated for the elements he wanted in the new constitution Most were incorporated in substance if not in form While Murray served as the convention s president delegates recognized Haskell s power in the body A local newspaper during the time the Guthrie Report called Haskell the power behind the throne Haskell had a perfect attendance and voting record during the session He advocated for provisions that affected both territories labor problems and advocated for representatives of organized labor Haskell also drafted a report drawing up county boundaries led the crusade for state prohibition introduced Jim Crow laws as were prevalent among Southern states to restrict African Americans to second class status and successfully kept female suffrage out of the state constitution Gubernatorial campaign editMain article 1907 Oklahoma gubernatorial election nbsp William Jennings Bryan supported Haskell in his 1907 campaign At Tulsa on March 26 1907 during the recess before the final adoption of the constitution by the convention Haskell held a large Democratic Party banquet at the Brady Hotel attended by between 500 and 600 of the leading Democrats of the new state During this banquet the first campaigns for governor were formally inaugurated During this evening his friends proposed Haskell for the Democratic gubernatorial candidacy Among the other potential candidates were Thomas Doyle of Perry and Lee Cruce of Ardmore Haskell like other prominent Democrats at the time had the strong support of labor and agriculture leaders 3 The party primaries for governor were set for June 8 and Doyle and Cruce had already been campaigning Haskell had little time During his campaign Haskell made 88 speeches in 45 days and reached nearly every county The lieutenants of the respective candidates were vigorously working in the school districts and securing support in every community Haskell s hard working nature led him to win the Democratic nomination Haskell won the Democratic primary by a more than 4 000 vote majority Frank Frantz the Republican territorial governor was nominated as the Republican candidate at their caucus at Tulsa Frantz was a former Rough Rider and a friend of U S President Theodore Roosevelt who had appointed him He was a very strong candidate for the Republican party Haskell challenged Frantz to joint public discussions throughout the state they discussed every problem facing administration of the new state during the campaign In addition two nationally prominent figures spoke at various locations Republican presidential nominee William Howard Taft and Democratic presidential nominee William Jennings Bryan Taft s disapproval of Oklahoma s proposed constitution and his recommendation that the people vote against it seemed to increase support for the Democrats Haskell won the gubernatorial race by more than 30 000 votes on September 17 1907 2 On the same day the voters ratified the new Oklahoma Constitution Governor of Oklahoma edit nbsp Governor Haskell as he appeared upon entering officeOn November 16 1907 five minutes after it was known that Oklahoma had officially become a state Guthrie Leader editor Leslie G Niblack administered the oath of office to Haskell The ceremony took place privately in Haskell s hotel apartments in the presence of his immediate family Robert Latham Owen United States Senator elect and Thomas Owen of Muskogee Haskell s former political manager Haskell s inaugural address at Guthrie delivered on the south steps of the Carnegie Library quickly lifted him into national prominence Haskell s old friends William H Murray and Robert L Williams also came into power with the state s founding with Murray as the state s first Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives and Williams appointed by Haskell as the first Oklahoma Supreme Court chief justice Haskell set the precedents for the use of executive power During the 1st Oklahoma Legislature Haskell delivered a message creating a commission charged with sending a message to the U S Congress amending the United States Constitution to provide for the election of U S senators by a direct vote of the people Although it did not occur until after he left office his efforts as well as the works of the Progressive era leaders provided for the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1912 Though Guthrie was the official capital of the state Haskell set up his administration from Oklahoma City Oklahoma City quickly grew in industry and prominence with a booming population of 64 000 shadowing the smaller city of Guthrie which was located just miles from the growing city Haskell personally led the move to change the capital from Guthrie to Oklahoma City First he moved the official home of the Great Seal of Oklahoma and Oklahoma Constitution Slowly all government functions moved to the Oklahoma City area nbsp Theodore Roosevelt would be one of Haskell s fiercest political opponents during his Governorship In the state legislature s first session under Haskell s leadership Oklahoma adopted laws regulating banking in the state reformed the old territorial prison system and protected the public from exploitative railroads public utilities trusts and monopolies Haskell also initiated a law insuring deposits in case of a bank failure a landmark piece of legislation in the nation Haskell also rigidly enforced prohibition through the Alcohol Control Act Though following progressive dogma at every turn such as the introduction of child labor laws factory inspection codes safety codes for mines health and sanitary laws and employer s liability for workers Haskell s legislative schedule also included Jim Crow laws for Oklahoma Haskell s other significant contributions while governor included establishing the Oklahoma Geological Survey the Oklahoma School for the Blind the Oklahoma College for Women and the Oklahoma State Department of Health In addition he helped to create the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals in 1908 Haskell selected the first judges of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals 4 Prior to statehood Kansas officials imprisoned individuals convicted of crimes in Oklahoma Territory Oklahoma Commissioner of Charities and Corrections Kate Barnard Oklahoma s first female state official visited the Kansas prisons and reported to Governor Haskell on the horrible conditions In response in 1908 Haskell pushed a bill through the state legislature that transferred 50 Oklahoma prisoners detained in the Kansas penitentiary at Lansing to McAlester Oklahoma When the Oklahoma state militia marched the prisoners down to McAlester they found no prison Under military supervision the prisoners built Oklahoma State Penitentiary the state s first correctional facility still in use today The militia housed the prisoners in a tent city and were authorized by Haskell to use lethal force against any prisoner that tried to escape A grandfather clause was also enacted by the 2nd Oklahoma Legislature by the state s Democratic leaders effectively excluding blacks from voting Haskell would spend the remainder of his term enforcing prohibition regulation of railroads and other trusts and the moving of the state capital to Oklahoma City Haskell s dream came true on June 11 1910 when Oklahoma City became the state s official capital Throughout his term as governor Haskell remained free from corruption Though he was the leader in the deliberations of the committee on county lines and county seats when hundreds of towns had committees attending the sessions with heavy purses he left these deliberations lean and poor and by the time he retired from the governor s office he had become utterly impoverished In debate he ignored the graces of oratory and instead marshaled facts arrayed statistics and piled up figures using his cutting wit and grim humor to carry his point At the end of his term as governor in 1911 Haskell stepped down from the governorship happy to see his 1907 Democratic primary challenger Lee Cruce inaugurated as the second governor of Oklahoma In 1912 Haskell unsuccessfully challenged incumbent U S Senator Robert Latham Owen in a hard fought Democratic primary for his U S Senate seat 5 National politics editNot only a powerful figure in Oklahoma politics Haskell s progressive roots and populist nature granted him national clout In 1908 Haskell headed the Oklahoma delegation to the National Democratic Convention at Denver where he was appointed treasurer of the Democratic National Committee 6 He was the spokesman for William Jennings Bryan in writing the platform of the convention Two months later he was forced to resign his treasurer position after allegations were leveled against him of taking illegal contributions from the Standard Oil Company 7 8 In 1920 he again headed the Oklahoma delegation at the National Convention which in that year met at San Francisco and was committed to and faithfully labored for United States Senator Robert Latham Owen of Oklahoma for the United States presidential nomination Haskell would serve in this post two more times a third in 1928 to the National Democratic Convention at Houston and a fourth time in 1932 to the National Democratic Convention at Chicago At each convention and in his speeches and in articles appearing in the public press he disclosed an intimate understanding of the big money masters of America and ruthlessly exposed many of their venal practices and their corrupt usage of the public funds in their own interest to the detriment of the people Later life death and legacy editHaskell entered the oil business after finishing his term as governor 9 a profession he would stay in until the end of his life In 1933 Haskell suffered a major stroke from which he would never recover Three months later Haskell would die from pneumonia Haskell lost consciousness on July 4 and died the next day in the Skirvin Hotel in Oklahoma City at the age of 73 He is buried in Muskogee Oklahoma 9 As Oklahoma s first governor one of his most significant achievements as governor was moving the state capital from Guthrie to Oklahoma City citation needed Charles Haskell Elementary in Edmond Oklahoma and Charles N Haskell Middle School in Broken Arrow Oklahoma are named in his honor Haskell County Oklahoma and the city of Haskell Oklahoma are also named for him In 2007 Oklahoma celebrated 100 years of statehood Many descendants of Charles Nathaniel Haskell were in attendance citation needed Haskell s legacy is riddled with controversy over his mistreatment and exploitation of Native American people in Oklahoma Electoral history edit1907 Oklahoma gubernatorial election 10 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Charles N Haskell 134 162 53 5 NewRepublican Frank Frantz 106 507 42 5 NewSocialist C C Ross 9 740 3 8 NewDemocratic gain from Swing N AOklahoma Democratic primary August 6 1912 10 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Robert L Owen Incumbent 80 204 64 3 Democratic Charles N Haskell 44 483 35 6 Turnout 124 687 State of the State Speeches editFirst State of the State Archived February 4 2012 at the Wayback Machine Second State of the State Archived February 4 2012 at the Wayback Machine Third State of the State Archived February 4 2012 at the Wayback Machine Fourth and final State of the State Archived June 24 2006 at the Wayback MachineSources editShort biography of Charles N Haskell Archived April 14 2011 at the Wayback Machine Address of Haskell from the Chronicles of Oklahoma Tribute to Haskell from the Chronicles of OklahomaReferences edit Haskell Charles Nathaniel The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Oklahoma Historical Society OHS Retrieved August 11 2023 a b c d e f Compton J J Haskell Charles Nathaniel 1860 1933 Archived July 18 2010 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Archived May 31 2010 at the Wayback Machine Oklahoma Historical Society accessed July 17 2013 A Century to Remember Archived September 10 2012 at the Wayback Machine Oklahoma House of Representatives Archived June 22 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 17 2013 Enrolled House Concurrent Resolution No 25 Archived September 2 2006 at the Wayback Machine Chronicles of Oklahoma Vol 11 No 3 September 1933 accessed July 14 2013 Belcher Wyatt W Political Leadership of Robert L Owen PDF Chronicles of Oklahoma Vol 31 Winter 1953 54 Oklahoma Historical Society pp 361 371 Archived from the original PDF on October 6 2013 Retrieved May 6 2013 Mack Is The Choice The Sunday Star Vol 173 no 17471 July 26 1908 p 1 via Newspapers com Ridder Is New Man The Sunday State Journal Vol 39 September 27 1908 p 1 via Newspapers com Gov Haskell Resigns as Bryan s Treasurer The Burr Oak Herald Vol XXIX no 42 Burr Oak Kansas October 8 1908 p 2 via Newspapers com a b Oklahoma Governors Archived September 14 2012 at the Wayback Machine Ok gov accessed July 14 2013 a b 1907 1912 Results PDF oklahoma gov Oklahoma State Election Board Retrieved September 23 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles N Haskell Charles Nathaniel Haskell Oklahoma Governor Find a Grave March 31 2002 Retrieved May 5 2013 Oklahoma Governor Charles Nathaniel Haskell National Governors Association Retrieved May 5 2013 Party political officesFirst Democratic nominee for Governor of Oklahoma1907 Succeeded byLee CrucePolitical officesPreceded byFrank FrantzTerritorial Governor Governor of Oklahoma1907 1911 Succeeded byLee CruceNotes and references1 The position of Governor of Oklahoma was created under the new Oklahoma Constitution It replaced the office of Governor of Oklahoma Territory Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles N Haskell amp oldid 1179852456, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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