19th Oklahoma Legislature explained

19th Oklahoma Legislature
Coa Pic:File:Flag of Oklahoma (1941–1988).svg
Leader1 Type:President of the Senate
Leader1:James E. Berry (D)
Leader2 Type:President Pro Tem of the Senate
Leader2:Tom Anglin (D)
Leader3 Type:Speaker of the House
Leader3:Harold Freeman (D)
Leader5 Type:Composition:
Leader5:Senate
40 4
House
94 24

The Nineteenth Oklahoma Legislature was a meeting of the legislative branch of the government of Oklahoma, composed of the Oklahoma Senate and the Oklahoma House of Representatives. The state legislature met in regular session at the Oklahoma State Capitol in Oklahoma City from January 5 to April 1, 1943, and in special session April 10–21, 1944, during the term of Governor Robert S. Kerr.[1] The special session was called by the governor to ensure military men and women could participate in the 1944 elections.[1]

Dates of session

Previous: 18th Legislature • Next: 20th Legislature

Party composition

Senate

AffiliationParty

(Shading indicates majority caucus)

Total
DemocraticRepublican
nowrap style="font-size:80%"40444
Voting share90.9%9.1%

House of Representatives

AffiliationParty

(Shading indicates majority caucus)

Total
DemocraticRepublican
nowrap style="font-size:80%"9424118
Voting share79.7%20.3%

Leadership

Senate

As Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma, James E. Berry served as the President of the Senate, giving him a tie-breaking vote and allowing him to serve as the presiding officer in ceremonial instances or during joint session. Tom Anglin served as the primary presiding officer, or President Pro Tempore of the Oklahoma Senate. He was a former Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives, during the term of Governor William H. Murray.[2]

House of Representatives

The Oklahoma Democratic Party held 93 seats in the Oklahoma House of Representatives in 1943, allowing them to select the Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives.[1] Harold Freeman of Pauls Valley, Oklahoma served in the role during the regular session in 1943 and Merle Lansden, a Marine private from Beaver, Oklahoma, served in the role during the special session in 1944.[1] Freeman was unable to serve because of being called to serve.[1] R.M. Mountcastle of Muskogee, Oklahoma served as the second-in-command, or Speaker Pro Tempore.[1]

Members

Senate

District Name Party
1 Dwight Leonard Dem
2 E.F. Cornels Dem
2 E.S. Collier Dem
3 E.P. Williams Rep
4 W.F. Hearne Dem
5 Burr Speck Dem
6 L.E. Wheeler Dem
6 E.D. Walker Dem
7 Bill Ginder Rep
8 Floyd Carrier Rep
9 Charles Duffy Dem
10 John Sanford Dem
11 Dem
12 Louis Ritzhaupt Dem
13 Mead Norton Dem
13 Boyd Cowden Dem
14 J.A. Rinehart Dem
14 Robert Burns Dem
15 Jack Neill Dem
15 Theodore Pruett Dem
16 George Bowman Dem
17 Phil Lowery Dem
17 Bill Logan Dem
18 Fred Chapman Dem
19 Dem
19 Homer Paul Dem
20 H.V. Posey Dem
21 Clint Braden Dem
22 Tom Anglin Dem
23 Allen Nichols Dem
24 Thomas Finney Dem
25 M.O. Counts Dem
26 Dem
27 Murrell Thornton Dem
27 Guy Curry Dem
28 Ray Fine Dem
29 Craig Goodpaster Dem
30 C.D. Wilson Dem
31 Clyde Sears Rep
32 S.E. Hammond Dem
33 H. Tom Brown Dem
34 Frank Mahan Dem
35 Ferman Phillips Dem
36 Joe Bailey Cobb Dem

House of Representatives

Name Party County
C.W. WatersAdair
W.E. Cordray Alfalfa
Harold Toaz Atoka
Merle Lansden Beaver
H.F. Carmichael Beckham
E.B. Grennell Blaine
William Parrish Bryan
W.H. Underwood Bryan
Harold Plummer Caddo
Amos Stovall Caddo
J.L. Trevathan Canadian
Rhys Evans Carter
Ernest Tate Carter
H.I. Hinds Cherokee
Bayless Irby Choctaw
C.R. Board Cimarron
Ben Huey Cleveland
Henry Binns Coal
W. J. Johnson Comanche
W. H. McKenzie Comanche
Charles Flanagan Cotton
Walter W. Bailey Craig
Fletcher Johnson Creek
Streeter Speakman Jr. Creek
Orange Starr Creek
W. R. Dunn Custer
W. Hendrix Wolf Delaware
T. J. Hussey Dewey
George Davison Ellis
John N. Camp Garfield
Earl Coldiron Garfield
Russell Farmer Garvin
Harold Freeman Garvin
Charles Van Dyck Grady
Bill Wallace Grady
Henry W. Worthington Greer
J. C. Hoffsommer Grant
T.N. Crow Harmon
Elzie S. Spicer Harper
D. C. Cantrell Haskell
Frank Crane Hughes
D. L. Jones Jackson
Woodie Snider Jackson
Dick Coleman Jefferson
T Bone King Johnston
James Dorsett Kay
W. E. Knapp Kay
Robert L. Barr Kingfisher
W. B. McDonald Kiowa
Jack Bradley Latimer
Raymond H. Lucas LeFlore
Arthur Reed LeFlore
C. L. Mills Lincoln
Carl Morgan Logan
John Steele Batson Love
Joe Story Major
J. Horace Harbison Marshall
Bill Gooldy Mayes
Purman Wilson McClain
Herbert D. Flowers McCurtain
Guy B. Massey McCurtain
Kirksey Nix McIntosh
J. A. Arms Murray
Robert P. Chandler Muskogee
R. M. Mountcastle Muskogee
J.M. Wiley Muskogee
Leon Hicks Noble
Charles A. Whitford Nowata
W. O. Black Okfuskee
Roger Standley Okfuskee
Ben Gullett Oklahoma
Ila Huff Oklahoma
B. B. Kerr Oklahoma
J. D. McCarty Oklahoma
Robert H. Sherman Oklahoma
Creekmore Wallace Oklahoma
Paul Washington Oklahoma
F. C. Helm Okmulgee
Cannon McMahan Okmulgee
Bill Shipley Okmulgee
Charles Bacon Osage
I. C. Sullivan Osage
C. A. Douthat Ottawa
Percy M. Smith Ottawa
Ward Guffy Pawnee
J.H. Arrington Payne
Elbert Weaver Payne
Aiden Allen Pittsburg
Andy Banks Pittsburg
C. Plowboy Edwards Pittsburg
Joe Tom McKinley Pontotoc
Virgil Medlock Pontotoc
Scott Glen Pottawatomie
Burke Larch-Miller Pottawatomie
John Levergood Pottawatomie
Claud Thompson Pushmataha
Wesley B. Hunt Roger Mills
H. Tom Kight Rogers
Walter Billingsley Seminole
Con Long Seminole
F.M. Streetman Seminole
Carl Frix Sequoyah
M. W. Pugh Stephens
James Bullard Stephens
Wallace Hughes Texas
E. H. Shelton Tillman
Joe Harshsbarger Tulsa
Johnson D. Hill Tulsa
D. M. Madrano Tulsa
Joe Musgrave Tulsa
Horace Newberry Tulsa
Arthur Price Tulsa
A. E. Williams Tulsa
W. B. Carr Wagoner
John M. Holliman Washington
Ed Hines Washita
R.W. McNally Woods
Frank Durant Woodward

References

  1. http://www.okhouse.gov/Documents/CenturyToRemember.pdf A Century to Remember
  2. http://www.odl.state.ok.us/almanac/2005/14-histry.pdf 2005 Oklahoma Almanac
  3. http://www.okhouse.gov/Members/Historic.aspx Historic Members