| ||||
|
JAMES
ROLPH, JR.
|
Born: August 23, 1869, in San Francisco, California Died: June 2, 1934, in Santa Clara County, California Marriage: Annie Marshall Reid (1900), 3 children |
||
|
James Rolph,
Jr., also known as “Sunny Jim,” was the fourth California governor to
be born in California. He was the
second governor to die while in office. |
||
Early Life |
James was born in San Francisco and spent
much of his life there. He graduated from Trinity Academy in 1888 and
became a messenger boy for DeWitt Kittle and Company, a shipping firm. |
||
Career |
After 12 years of holding various positions with DeWitt Kittle and Company, Rolph and a friend, George U. Hind, founded their own shipping business. A few years later Rolph was a founder and then president of the Mission Bank. When the 1906 earthquake and fire devastated the city, Rolph organized relief services. A later business of building wooden ships at a shipyard on Humboldt Bay proved unprofitable as the market disappeared with the end of the First World War. Positions with the San Francisco Chamber
of Commerce and as vice-president of the 1915 Panama-Pacific International
Exposition brought Rolph into the political
scene. He was mayor of San Francisco for 19 years
(1911-29), during which time the civic center complex was begun, street
car service started, and the Hetch Hetchy
water system secured. |
||
As |
Rolph began his
term as governor with great optimism, but it was soon evident that the
surplus left in the treasury by the previous administration was not
enough to offset the economic depression. In addition, charges of fraud
and the granting of contracts to friends and supporters were brought
against Rolph. As the governor failed to address
issues, many felt he did not realize the gravity of the situation. Farmers
belonging to the State Grange circulated a petition of recall of the
governor, and a Senate committee held investigations, issuing a report
that was highly critical of the administration. |
||
Later Years |
In February 1934, while trying to build up some support for another term as governor, Rolph fell ill. The next several months were spent in a hospital or at his Santa Clara County ranch. He died in June of a heart ailment. |
||