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HIRAM
WARREN JOHNSON
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Born: September 2, 1866, in Sacramento, California Died: August 6, 1945, in Bethesda, Maryland Marriage: Minnie L. McNeal (1887), 2 sons |
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Hiram Johnson was the third California governor to
be born in California. He was the
first governor since John Bigler (1853) to
be elected to a second term. An aggressive and ambitious politician,
Johnson served the state for six years as governor and 28 years as U.S. senator. |
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Early Life |
Hiram was born in Sacramento where he attended
elementary and high school. He spent several years at the University of California at Berkeley and worked
as a shorthand reporter before following his father in studying law.
Hiram’s father, Grove L. Johnson, was also active in politics, serving
as a state assemblyman. From 1888-96 Hiram joined his father and brother
in a law office in Sacramento. |
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Career |
When Hiram began disagreeing with his
father on political issues, he left the law partnership. He was opposed
to the Southern Pacific railroad monopoly that supported his father
for political office. In 1902 Hiram moved to San Francisco and established
his own law practice. There he became well known when he served as prosecuting
attorney in a much-publicized city graft trial that led to the conviction
of labor leader Abe Ruef. In 1910 the direct
primary election was used for the first time to select the candidates,
thus limiting the power of the railroad “machine” to control the election.
Johnson’s campaign for governor was based on opposition to the railroad
power. |
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As |
Hiram Johnson’s two terms as governor
were marked by sweeping legislative changes that restructured and revitalized
the California government.
He was the first governor in U.S. history to
submit to the legislature a comprehensive annual budget. Midway in his
second term, Johnson was elected to the U.S. Senate and left the governor’s
position when President Wilson called the U.S. Congress into special
session in March 1917. |
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Later Years |
Johnson spent 28 years in the U.S. Senate, becoming a leader on the side of isolationism. He opposed U.S. involvement in the League of Nations and the United Nations, and fought to restrict Japanese immigration. He paid little attention during these years to local politics in his home state. Johnson was 79 years old when he died at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland. |
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