Sneha Girap (Editor)

Sidney Preston Osborn

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Preceded by
  
Robert Taylor Jones

Political party
  
Democratic

Education
  
Georgetown University

Succeeded by
  
Dan Edward Garvey

Preceded by
  
Inaugural Holder

Name
  
Sidney Osborn

Party
  
Democratic Party

Resigned
  
May 25, 1948

Sidney Preston Osborn image2findagravecomphotos200714413889153118
Spouse(s)
  
Marjorie Grant Osborn (her death) Gladys Smiley Osborn (his death)

Role
  
Former Governor of Arizona

Died
  
May 25, 1948, Phoenix, Arizona, United States

Previous office
  
Governor of Arizona (1941–1948)

Sidney Preston Osborn (May 17, 1884 – May 25, 1948) was the first Secretary of State of Arizona, and later the seventh Governor of Arizona and is, as of 2015, the only governor of Arizona to be elected to four consecutive terms (Governors of Arizona served biennial terms with no limits up until 1968, when it was changed to serve quadrennial terms, and changed again in 1992 to a limit of two terms at a time). Osborn is also the second native-born governor of Arizona, preceded by Thomas Edward Campbell.

Contents

Early years and political rise

Osborn worked as a page for the Arizona Territorial Legislature in 1898, and later a secretary to the Congressional Delegate John Frank Wilson (1903-1905). For a time Osborn worked as a newspaper reporter and editor; later he served as a delegate to the Arizona state constitutional convention of 1910.

Career in the state of Arizona

Despite being elected three times as Secretary of State by wide margins in the 1910s, Osborn had little political success for the next two decades. He lost two primaries for Governor in 1924 and 1938, and a Senate primary against Henry F. Ashurst in 1934. Despite a narrow primary win in 1940, his elections as a gubernatorial nominee never went below 60% of the vote.

His governing style was no-nonsense. The best example occurred at the very beginning of his governorship: Upon taking office, Osborn had the state's top officials turn in a signed, but undated, resignation letter. If an official became an embarrassment to the state, Osborn would date the letter, and announce the official had resigned.

During his fourth term, Osborn suffered from Lou Gehrig's Disease and was hardly able to communicate with his staff. He eventually died in office in 1948 and was succeeded by Dan Garvey.

Despite numerous conceptions, Osborn Road in Phoenix was not named after Osborn. It was first named as such in 1900 when Osborn was 16.

References

Sidney Preston Osborn Wikipedia