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Leonard B Jordan

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Preceded by
  
Henry Dworshak

Succeeded by
  
Robert Smylie

Education
  
University of Oregon

Succeeded by
  
Jim McClure

Name
  
Leonard Jordan

Party
  
Republican Party

Lieutenant
  
Edson H. Deal

Role
  
Former Governor of Idaho

Preceded by
  
C. A. Robins

Spouse
  
Grace Jordan (m. 1924)


Leonard B. Jordan httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsff

Full Name
  
Leonard Beck Jordan

Born
  
May 15, 1899 Mount Pleasant, Utah (
1899-05-15
)

Resting place
  
Cloverdale Memorial Park Boise, Idaho

Died
  
June 30, 1983, Boise, Idaho, United States

Parents
  
Leonard Eugene Jordan, Irene Beck Jordan

Previous office
  
Senator (ID) 1962–1973

Leonard Beck "Len" Jordan (May 15, 1899 – June 30, 1983) was the 23rd Governor of Idaho and a United States Senator for over ten years.

Contents

Early years

Born in Mount Pleasant, Utah, Jordan's father was a county judge and his mother was a schoolteacher; the family relocated to northeast Oregon and he was educated in the public schools of Enterprise. From a large family, he worked on a ranch then enlisted in the U.S. Army at age 18 in 1917. After two years in the service, he attended the University of Oregon in Eugene on a football scholarship, and was a 175 lb (79 kg) halfback for the Ducks. Jordan graduated in 1923, and was awarded a key to Phi Beta Kappa. He married classmate Grace Edington on December 30, 1924.

Career

Jordan was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army during World War I, but did not serve overseas. After college, he was a sheep rancher in Hells Canyon in Idaho during the Great Depression at Kirkwood Bar, and then settled in Grangeville in 1940, where he established a farm implement business, a real estate agency, and an automobile dealership.

Governor

Jordan was elected to the state senate in 1946, lost his seat in 1948, then successfully ran for governor in 1950.

During his four-year term, slot machines were banned; employment, unemployment, and job training services were merged; and the state highway commission was initiated. Jordan did not run for re-election in 1954 because it was not allowed at the time. Starting with the 1946 election, Idaho changed from two-year to four-year terms for governor, but disallowed self-succession (re-election). Jordan's successor as governor was the former attorney general, Robert Smylie, who successfully lobbied the 1955 legislature to propose an amendment to the state constitution to allow gubernatorial re-election, which was approved by voters in the 1956 general election. (Smylie was re-elected in 1958 and 1962, and sought a fourth term in 1966, but was defeated in the primary.)

In 1955, Jordan was appointed by President Eisenhower as Chairman of the United States section of the International Joint Commission with Canada.

U.S. Senate

In August 1962, Jordan was appointed to the U.S. Senate by Governor Smylie, following the death of Henry Dworshak in July. In November, Jordan defeated Democratic Congresswoman Gracie Pfost of Nampa in the special election to complete the remaining four years of the term. Jordan was re-elected in 1966, defeating former Democratic Congressman Ralph Harding of Blackfoot.

Source: ^Jordan was appointed to the vacant seat in August 1962

In the Senate, he helped Frank Church establish the Sawtooth National Recreation Area in 1972. At age 73, Jordan did not seek re-election in 1972 and was succeeded by Jim McClure, the three-term Republican congressman from the first district. Jordan was the first from Idaho to voluntarily retire from the U.S. Senate.

A state office building in Boise, near the state capitol, was named for him in December 1973.

Death

Jordan died at age 84 in Boise on June 30, 1983, and his wife died two years later. They are interred at Cloverdale Memorial Park in west Boise.

Daughter Patricia (1927–2010) married Charles F. Story, Jr. (1926–2014) of Spokane in 1951; and they later lived in Boise. Eldest son Joseph (1929–2015) graduated from the U.S. Military Academy (West Point) in 1952 and served three years in the U.S. Army. He went to graduate school in civil engineering at Iowa State University in Ames and was a district vice president with Morrison Knudsen in Alaska. Youngest son Stephen (1932–2015) graduated from the University of Idaho in Moscow in 1955 in mechanical engineering, and worked for General Electric

References

Leonard B. Jordan Wikipedia