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Don Samuelson

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Lieutenant
  
Jack Murphy

Political party
  
Republican

Education
  
Knox College

Nationality
  
United States

Spouse
  
Ruby Samuelson (m. 1936)


Succeeded by
  
Cecil Andrus

Role
  
Former Governor of Idaho

Preceded by
  
Robert Smylie

Name
  
Don Samuelson

Party
  
Republican Party

Full Name
  
Donald William Samuelson

Born
  
July 27, 1913 Woodhull, Illinois (
1913-07-27
)

Resting place
  
Pinecrest Memorial Park Sandpoint, Idaho

Died
  
January 20, 2000, Seattle, Washington, United States

Previous office
  
Governor of Idaho (1967–1971)

Books
  
His Hand on My Shoulder: A Life Story of Hunting Fishing Love and Politics

Donald William Samuelson (July 27, 1913 – January 20, 2000) was a Republican politician from Idaho. He was the state's 25th governor, serving a single term from 1967 to 1971, and is the state's most recent incumbent governor to lose a re-election bid (1970).

Contents

Early years

Born in Woodhull, Illinois, Samuelson grew up on a farm, and attended Knox College. He and his wife, Ruby A. Samuelson, were married in 1936 and had two children.

Career

Samuelson served in the U.S. Navy during World War II as a weapons instructor and gunsmith at the Farragut Naval Training Station, a major inland training facility at Lake Pend Oreille in northern Idaho.

After the war, Samuelson stayed in the area; he brought his family out from Illinois and opened a sporting goods store in nearby Sandpoint. He also had an interest in a business that sold and leased mining and logging equipment.

Governor

A conservative, Samuelson was encouraged by Governor Robert Smylie to run for the Idaho Senate in 1960. Samuelson won and was re-elected in 1962 and 1964. After the Democratic landslide of 1964, he decided to run for governor in 1966, which was still held by three-term incumbent Smylie, a moderate Republican from Boise and former state attorney general. In a heated race that drew national attention to the Republican gubernatorial primary, Samuelson won handily, 61 to 39%.

Following their wins in the early August primary, Samuelson and attorney Charles Herndon of Salmon were slated to face each other in the November general election. In mid-September, while flying from Pocatello to Coeur d'Alene, Herndon and two others were killed in a plane crash in the central Idaho mountains, northwest of Stanley. The pilot of the twin-engine Piper PA-23 was the only survivor. Occurring only seven weeks before the election, the Democrats nominated the runner-up in the primary, state senator Cecil Andrus of Orofino, whom Samuelson defeated by over 10,000 votes.

During the 1970 gubernatorial campaign, Samuelson supported molybdenum mining in central Idaho's White Cloud Mountains, and was defeated for re-election by Andrus – a staunch opponent of the mining development – and returned to private life.

Following Samuelson's win in 1966, Democrats won the next six gubernatorial elections in Idaho, through 1990.

Death

Samuelson died at age 86 of a heart attack on January 20, 2000, at the Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. He is interred at Pinecrest Memorial Park in Sandpoint, Idaho

References

Don Samuelson Wikipedia


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