'Coke Robert Stevenson' (1888–1975) was the
United States Governor of
Texas from
1941 to
1947. He is the only 20th century Texas politician to serve as speaker of the Texas House of Representatives, lieutenant governor, and governor.
Born
March 20,
1888 in
Mason County, Texas to Robert Milton and Virginia Hurley Stevenson; his parents named him after Thomas Coke, a
Methodist bishop. As a teenager, he went into the business of hauling freight. In
1913, Coke Stevenson became President of the
First National Bank in
Junction, Texas. He served as
Kimble County Attorney from
1914 to
1918, and Kimble County Judge from
1919 until
1921. In
1928 he was elected to the
Texas House of Representatives and served there from
1929 until
1939, when he was elected
Lieutenant Governor.
Stevenson succeeded to the governorship on
August 4, 1941, when Governor
W. Lee "Pappy" O'Daniel resigned to take his seat in the
U.S. Senate, which he won in a special election. A dramatic contrast to the flamboyant and unpredictable O'Daniel, Stevenson's approach was so conservative and taciturn that his critics accused him of doing nothing. But Stevenson was reelected in
1942 and
1944 by substantial margins, and when he left the governorship in January 1947 he was the longest-serving governor in the history of
Texas and had presided over a broad and deep economic recovery during the years of
World War II.
He ran for the U.S. Senate in
1948, and was defeated in a furious and controversial
Democratic Party primary runoff by Austin Congressman
Lyndon B. Johnson. The disputed final margin of victory for Johnson was 87 votes, the closest senatorial vote in the nation's history.
After the loss to Johnson, Stevenson retired to Junction; disenchanted with the Democratic Party, he supported
Republicans for the rest of his life. He died
June 28,
1975, in
San Angelo. Stevenson was a major figure in the second volume of
Robert Caro's biography of
Lyndon Johnson, which covers the disputed
1948 election for the
U.S. Senate. Caro characterized the conservative Stevenson as a reluctant, honest statesman. Some critics of Caro's analysis believe that he portrayed Stevenson in an overly heroic manner in order to be a clear contrast to Johnson. Stevenson was a traditional Democratic Texas politician. Although he was very popular, he was a racist. In 1943, for example, when Stevenson was governor, a black man was lynched in Texarkana, Texas. When asked about the lynching, Stevenson said, "Well, you know these Negroes sometimes do those kinds of things that provoke whites to such action."
References
Tex. Legis. Council, ''Presiding Officers of the Texas Legislature: 1846-1995'' 77, 185 (1995)
External links
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Historic photographs of Coke R. Stevenson, hosted by the
Portal to Texas History