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Jack C. Walton

John Calloway Walton (March 6, 1881 – November 25, 1949) was an American politician and the fifth governor of Oklahoma. He served the shortest term of any Governor of Oklahoma,[1] being the first Governor in the state's history to be removed from office.[2][3]

Jack Walton
5th Governor of Oklahoma
In office
January 9, 1923 – November 19, 1923
LieutenantMartin E. Trapp
Preceded byJames Robertson
Succeeded byMartin E. Trapp
18th Mayor of Oklahoma City
In office
April 7, 1919 – January 9, 1923
Preceded byByron D. Shear
Succeeded byMike Donnelly (acting)
Personal details
Born
John Calloway Walton

(1881-03-06)March 6, 1881
Greensboro, Indiana, U.S.
DiedNovember 25, 1949(1949-11-25) (aged 68)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseMadeleine Orrick
EducationArkansas Commercial College

Following his removal from office, he entered the primary for a seat in the United States Senate, winning the Democratic nomination, but losing to William B. Pine, a Republican. He was elected to the Oklahoma Corporation Commission in 1932 and served until 1939, running for governor again in 1934 and 1938. He died in 1949 and is buried in Rose Hill Cemetery in Oklahoma City.

Early life

John Calloway Walton was born on March 6, 1881, in Greensboro, Indiana.[1] He spent six years in Indianapolis before his family moved to Lincoln, Nebraska. At the age of sixteen, Walton joined the United States Army in 1897, and served for six years. Walton did not see combat service during the Spanish–American War; however he did serve at a post in Mexico for some time.

Following his discharge from the Army in 1903, Walton traveled to Oklahoma Territory to make his life as a contractor in the field of civil engineering.[1] Walton set up his practice in the thriving metropolis of Oklahoma City. Walton lived in Oklahoma City when Oklahoma was officially admitted to the Union on November 16, 1907, and saw the capital moved from Guthrie, Oklahoma to Oklahoma City in 1910.

Walton joined the Democratic Party and became an active participant in the state's political matters. In 1917, under the Robert L. Williams administration, Walton was elected to his first political office.[2] Due to his engineering experience, Walton easily won election to the office of Commissioner of Public Works of Oklahoma City. Due to his success in that office, two years later Walton was elected as the mayor of Oklahoma City, a post he served in until 1923.[1]

Before his term as mayor ended, Walton entered his name in the Democratic primary as a candidate for Governor of Oklahoma to succeed James B. A. Robertson. After winning the Democratic nomination Walton travelled around the state giving the most colorful and liveliest speeches and campaign platforms in Oklahoma's history until that point. In the general election, Walton was successful in his bid (despite an advertising campaign by conservative Democrats accusing him of "Sovietism" and "state Socialism"),[4] and his inauguration and inaugural ball were just as lively as his campaign.[1]

Governor of Oklahoma

Walton was inaugurated as the fifth Governor of Oklahoma on January 9, 1923. Walton represented the progressive wing of the Democratic Party and his policies reflected this. Despite this, many of the programs in his domestic policy (the Reconstruction League) were accepted by the Oklahoma Legislature and 1923 proved to be one of the most progressive legislative sessions in the state's history. Among Walton's reforms were an expanded farm cooperative program to aid troubled farms, a revision of the Workman's Compensation Law for improved benefits to employees, and stronger warehouse inspection laws to satisfy Oklahoma's cotton and wheat farmers.

Walton looked to his predecessor Robertson for many ideas of his administration. Just as education had been a large part of Robertson's programs, so it became with Walton. Walton passed through the Legislature Oklahoma's first program to allow free text books to all students in Oklahoma's schools and a grant of over $1,000,000 in state funds to aid weak schools. In true progressive manner, Walton instituted harsher penalties for breaking state laws and regulations, increased spending on welfare programs, and instituted a farm stabilization program under the supervision of the State Board of Agriculture.

Walton's troubles first began when he began to flip-flop[how?] between those progressives who supported his programs and those conservatives who did not. Walton began to lose control of the Legislature and by trying to appeal to both sides[how?], lost all support[citation needed]. Hoping to regain his lost support, Walton attempted to gain factional support by making appointments of the faction leaders[who?] to the higher level government and educational positions. Though he would see minor success in this venture[clarification needed], in the long term this proved to be ineffective.[citation needed]

By 1921, the white racist Ku Klux Klan had grown to dangerous levels of power, which resulted in the Tulsa Race Massacre in which angry whites raged through black neighborhoods, beating and killing. As many as ten thousand were left homeless with "the official count of 36" dead.[5] The violence continued during Walton's administration. In order to crack down on the Klan, Walton declared martial law in Okmulgee and Tulsa counties, and he suspended the writ of habeas corpus in Tulsa County.

Impeachment and removal

Walton's main opponents in Oklahoma politics were "disappointed office-seekers, the klan, and the school bloc" according to a 1930 study.[3]

The Oklahoma Constitution strictly forbade any member of the state government from suspending this writ and the legislature was outraged by Governor Walton's action. In response, a grand jury was established in Oklahoma City and charged with investigating. Following the announcement of the creation of the grand jury, on September 15, 1923, Walton declared "absolute martial law" for the entire state. Impeachment demands filled the State Capitol and the leaders of the House of Representatives and Senate acted by calling a special session on October 2.

Hoping to prevent the impeachment charges from being carried out, Walton called the Legislature into a special session of his own on October 11 with the topic being the KKK. The Legislature refused to meet and recessed until October 17 when impeachment charges could be organized. Under the supervision of the Speaker of the House William Dalton McBee, the House brought twenty-two charges against Walton, and voted for impeachment. Soon after, on October 23, Walton was suspended in his office as Governor and Lieutenant Governor Martin E. Trapp became acting Governor.

Representative Wesley E. Disney (D-Tulsa), acted as the prosecutor in the Senate, which oversaw his impeachment trial its function as the Court of Impeachment. His impeachment trial in the Senate was presided over by the chief justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court[who?]. Of the House's twenty-two charges, eleven were sustained, including "illegal collection of campaign funds, padding the public payroll, suspension of habeas corpus, excessive use of the pardon power, and general incompetence." On November 19, 1923, Walton was convicted and removed from office.[6] Lieutenant Governor Trapp succeeded Walton and became the sixth Governor of Oklahoma on the same day.[7]

The impeachment is said to have "frightened" the state "into a system of preferential voting as an escape from minority nominations." Walton received only "an extremely small per cent of the total votes cast" in the Democratic primary, yet was still selected as the Democratic candidate. This perceived injustice induced the Legislature to adopt a different electoral system. Eventually, they created the primary electoral system in the state.[8]

Later political activity and death

In 1924, the year after Walton's removal from office, U.S. Senator Robert L. Owen retired; he had represented Oklahoma in the Senate since it became a state in 1907. Walton promptly entered the primary for Senator and won the Democratic nomination with just 30% of the vote, narrowly defeating Rep. E. B. Howard.[9] Walton may have won the nomination so soon after his removal from office because he was the only Democratic candidate to criticize the Klan publicly.[3] However, Walton lost in the general election in a landslide (62% to 35%) to Republican William B. Pine. Leading Democrats in the state responded by enacting a ranked-choice voting scheme that required voters to support second and third choices in order for their ballots to count, a provision that resulted in the primary electoral system being ruled unconstitutional. After that legislation was passed to implement the run-off system that is in place in the state today.[10]

In 1932, Walton was elected to the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, and served from 1933 to 1939.

In 1934, and again in 1938, he ran for Governor, losing both times in Democratic primary.

After his service as Commissioner, Walton retired from political office. He spent his remaining years practicing law in Oklahoma City, where he died at the age of 68 on November 25, 1949. He is buried in Rose Hill Cemetery in Oklahoma City.

State of the State Speech

  • First and only State of the State Speech

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Biographical Note John Walton," Oklahoma Department of Libraries (accessed May 17, 2010).
  2. ^ a b O'Dell, Larry, "Walton, John Calloway (1881–1949)," Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture April 16, 2009, at the Wayback Machine (accessed May 17, 2010).
  3. ^ a b Ewing, Cortez A. M. (1930). "Impeachment of Oklahoma Governors". American Political Science Review. 24 (3): 648–652. doi:10.2307/1946932. ISSN 0003-0554. JSTOR 1946932. S2CID 147191855.
  4. ^ "A Democratic Vote For Fields Is A Protest —Against 'The March of the Iron Battalions of Sovietism'" full-page advertisement The Morning Tulsa Daily World, November 05, 1922, Society Section p. 17
  5. ^ Various (February 21, 2001). Report on Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. Oklahoma Commission to Study the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. p. 123. (...) the official count of 36 (...)
  6. ^ O'Dell, Larry. WALTON, JOHN CALLOWAY (1881-1949) December 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture April 16, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. (accessed July 2, 2013)
  7. ^ [1] | WALTON, JOHN CALLOWAY (1881–1949) | Larry O'Dell | [2]
  8. ^ Barth, H A (July 1925). "Oklahoma Adopts Preferential Voting in the Primary". National Municipal Review. United States: National Municipal League. 14 (7): 410–3. doi:10.1002/ncr.4110140707.
  9. ^ https://www.ok.gov/elections/documents/1922-1926_RESULTS.pdf July 9, 2017, at the Wayback Machine[bare URL PDF]
  10. ^ "That one time when Oklahoma enacted ranked choice voting". March 30, 2017.

Further reading

  • Brad L. Duren, "'Klanspiracy' or Despotism? The Rise and Fall of Governor Jack Walton, Featuring W. D. McBee," Chronicles of Oklahoma 2002–03 80(4): 468–485.

External links

  • "John Calloway Walton". Oklahoma City Mayor, Oklahoma Governor. Find a Grave. May 13, 2008. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
Political offices
Preceded by Mayor of Oklahoma City
1919–1923
Succeeded by
Mike Donnelly
Acting
Preceded by Governor of Oklahoma
1923
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Oklahoma
1922
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from Oklahoma
(Class 2)

1924
Succeeded by

jack, walton, john, calloway, walton, march, 1881, november, 1949, american, politician, fifth, governor, oklahoma, served, shortest, term, governor, oklahoma, being, first, governor, state, history, removed, from, office, jack, walton5th, governor, oklahomain. John Calloway Walton March 6 1881 November 25 1949 was an American politician and the fifth governor of Oklahoma He served the shortest term of any Governor of Oklahoma 1 being the first Governor in the state s history to be removed from office 2 3 Jack Walton5th Governor of OklahomaIn office January 9 1923 November 19 1923LieutenantMartin E TrappPreceded byJames RobertsonSucceeded byMartin E Trapp18th Mayor of Oklahoma CityIn office April 7 1919 January 9 1923Preceded byByron D ShearSucceeded byMike Donnelly acting Personal detailsBornJohn Calloway Walton 1881 03 06 March 6 1881Greensboro Indiana U S DiedNovember 25 1949 1949 11 25 aged 68 Oklahoma City Oklahoma U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseMadeleine OrrickEducationArkansas Commercial CollegeFollowing his removal from office he entered the primary for a seat in the United States Senate winning the Democratic nomination but losing to William B Pine a Republican He was elected to the Oklahoma Corporation Commission in 1932 and served until 1939 running for governor again in 1934 and 1938 He died in 1949 and is buried in Rose Hill Cemetery in Oklahoma City Contents 1 Early life 2 Governor of Oklahoma 3 Impeachment and removal 4 Later political activity and death 5 State of the State Speech 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life EditJohn Calloway Walton was born on March 6 1881 in Greensboro Indiana 1 He spent six years in Indianapolis before his family moved to Lincoln Nebraska At the age of sixteen Walton joined the United States Army in 1897 and served for six years Walton did not see combat service during the Spanish American War however he did serve at a post in Mexico for some time Following his discharge from the Army in 1903 Walton traveled to Oklahoma Territory to make his life as a contractor in the field of civil engineering 1 Walton set up his practice in the thriving metropolis of Oklahoma City Walton lived in Oklahoma City when Oklahoma was officially admitted to the Union on November 16 1907 and saw the capital moved from Guthrie Oklahoma to Oklahoma City in 1910 Walton joined the Democratic Party and became an active participant in the state s political matters In 1917 under the Robert L Williams administration Walton was elected to his first political office 2 Due to his engineering experience Walton easily won election to the office of Commissioner of Public Works of Oklahoma City Due to his success in that office two years later Walton was elected as the mayor of Oklahoma City a post he served in until 1923 1 Before his term as mayor ended Walton entered his name in the Democratic primary as a candidate for Governor of Oklahoma to succeed James B A Robertson After winning the Democratic nomination Walton travelled around the state giving the most colorful and liveliest speeches and campaign platforms in Oklahoma s history until that point In the general election Walton was successful in his bid despite an advertising campaign by conservative Democrats accusing him of Sovietism and state Socialism 4 and his inauguration and inaugural ball were just as lively as his campaign 1 Governor of Oklahoma EditWalton was inaugurated as the fifth Governor of Oklahoma on January 9 1923 Walton represented the progressive wing of the Democratic Party and his policies reflected this Despite this many of the programs in his domestic policy the Reconstruction League were accepted by the Oklahoma Legislature and 1923 proved to be one of the most progressive legislative sessions in the state s history Among Walton s reforms were an expanded farm cooperative program to aid troubled farms a revision of the Workman s Compensation Law for improved benefits to employees and stronger warehouse inspection laws to satisfy Oklahoma s cotton and wheat farmers Walton looked to his predecessor Robertson for many ideas of his administration Just as education had been a large part of Robertson s programs so it became with Walton Walton passed through the Legislature Oklahoma s first program to allow free text books to all students in Oklahoma s schools and a grant of over 1 000 000 in state funds to aid weak schools In true progressive manner Walton instituted harsher penalties for breaking state laws and regulations increased spending on welfare programs and instituted a farm stabilization program under the supervision of the State Board of Agriculture Walton s troubles first began when he began to flip flop how between those progressives who supported his programs and those conservatives who did not Walton began to lose control of the Legislature and by trying to appeal to both sides how lost all support citation needed Hoping to regain his lost support Walton attempted to gain factional support by making appointments of the faction leaders who to the higher level government and educational positions Though he would see minor success in this venture clarification needed in the long term this proved to be ineffective citation needed By 1921 the white racist Ku Klux Klan had grown to dangerous levels of power which resulted in the Tulsa Race Massacre in which angry whites raged through black neighborhoods beating and killing As many as ten thousand were left homeless with the official count of 36 dead 5 The violence continued during Walton s administration In order to crack down on the Klan Walton declared martial law in Okmulgee and Tulsa counties and he suspended the writ of habeas corpus in Tulsa County Impeachment and removal EditWalton s main opponents in Oklahoma politics were disappointed office seekers the klan and the school bloc according to a 1930 study 3 The Oklahoma Constitution strictly forbade any member of the state government from suspending this writ and the legislature was outraged by Governor Walton s action In response a grand jury was established in Oklahoma City and charged with investigating Following the announcement of the creation of the grand jury on September 15 1923 Walton declared absolute martial law for the entire state Impeachment demands filled the State Capitol and the leaders of the House of Representatives and Senate acted by calling a special session on October 2 Hoping to prevent the impeachment charges from being carried out Walton called the Legislature into a special session of his own on October 11 with the topic being the KKK The Legislature refused to meet and recessed until October 17 when impeachment charges could be organized Under the supervision of the Speaker of the House William Dalton McBee the House brought twenty two charges against Walton and voted for impeachment Soon after on October 23 Walton was suspended in his office as Governor and Lieutenant Governor Martin E Trapp became acting Governor Representative Wesley E Disney D Tulsa acted as the prosecutor in the Senate which oversaw his impeachment trial its function as the Court of Impeachment His impeachment trial in the Senate was presided over by the chief justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court who Of the House s twenty two charges eleven were sustained including illegal collection of campaign funds padding the public payroll suspension of habeas corpus excessive use of the pardon power and general incompetence On November 19 1923 Walton was convicted and removed from office 6 Lieutenant Governor Trapp succeeded Walton and became the sixth Governor of Oklahoma on the same day 7 The impeachment is said to have frightened the state into a system of preferential voting as an escape from minority nominations Walton received only an extremely small per cent of the total votes cast in the Democratic primary yet was still selected as the Democratic candidate This perceived injustice induced the Legislature to adopt a different electoral system Eventually they created the primary electoral system in the state 8 Later political activity and death EditIn 1924 the year after Walton s removal from office U S Senator Robert L Owen retired he had represented Oklahoma in the Senate since it became a state in 1907 Walton promptly entered the primary for Senator and won the Democratic nomination with just 30 of the vote narrowly defeating Rep E B Howard 9 Walton may have won the nomination so soon after his removal from office because he was the only Democratic candidate to criticize the Klan publicly 3 However Walton lost in the general election in a landslide 62 to 35 to Republican William B Pine Leading Democrats in the state responded by enacting a ranked choice voting scheme that required voters to support second and third choices in order for their ballots to count a provision that resulted in the primary electoral system being ruled unconstitutional After that legislation was passed to implement the run off system that is in place in the state today 10 In 1932 Walton was elected to the Oklahoma Corporation Commission and served from 1933 to 1939 In 1934 and again in 1938 he ran for Governor losing both times in Democratic primary After his service as Commissioner Walton retired from political office He spent his remaining years practicing law in Oklahoma City where he died at the age of 68 on November 25 1949 He is buried in Rose Hill Cemetery in Oklahoma City State of the State Speech EditFirst and only State of the State SpeechReferences Edit a b c d e Biographical Note John Walton Oklahoma Department of Libraries accessed May 17 2010 a b O Dell Larry Walton John Calloway 1881 1949 Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Archived April 16 2009 at the Wayback Machine accessed May 17 2010 a b Ewing Cortez A M 1930 Impeachment of Oklahoma Governors American Political Science Review 24 3 648 652 doi 10 2307 1946932 ISSN 0003 0554 JSTOR 1946932 S2CID 147191855 A Democratic Vote For Fields Is A Protest Against The March of the Iron Battalions of Sovietism full page advertisement The Morning Tulsa Daily World November 05 1922 Society Section p 17 Various February 21 2001 Report on Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 Oklahoma Commission to Study the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 p 123 the official count of 36 O Dell Larry WALTON JOHN CALLOWAY 1881 1949 Archived December 16 2014 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Archived April 16 2009 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 2 2013 1 WALTON JOHN CALLOWAY 1881 1949 Larry O Dell 2 Barth H A July 1925 Oklahoma Adopts Preferential Voting in the Primary National Municipal Review United States National Municipal League 14 7 410 3 doi 10 1002 ncr 4110140707 https www ok gov elections documents 1922 1926 RESULTS pdf Archived July 9 2017 at the Wayback Machine bare URL PDF That one time when Oklahoma enacted ranked choice voting March 30 2017 Further reading EditBrad L Duren Klanspiracy or Despotism The Rise and Fall of Governor Jack Walton Featuring W D McBee Chronicles of Oklahoma 2002 03 80 4 468 485 External links Edit John Calloway Walton Oklahoma City Mayor Oklahoma Governor Find a Grave May 13 2008 Retrieved July 17 2013 Political officesPreceded byByron D Shear Mayor of Oklahoma City1919 1923 Succeeded byMike DonnellyActingPreceded byJames Robertson Governor of Oklahoma1923 Succeeded byMartin E TrappParty political officesPreceded byJames Robertson Democratic nominee for Governor of Oklahoma1922 Succeeded byHenry S JohnstonPreceded byRobert Latham Owen Democratic nominee for U S Senator from Oklahoma Class 2 1924 Succeeded byThomas Gore Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jack C Walton amp oldid 1166024574, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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