Andrew H. Longino | |
Image Name: | Andrew_Longino.jpg |
Party: | Democratic |
Order1: | 35th |
Title1: | Governor of Mississippi |
Term Start1: | January 16, 1900 |
Term End1: | January 19, 1904 |
Lieutenant1: | James T. Harrison |
Predecessor1: | Anselm J. McLaurin |
Successor1: | James K. Vardaman |
Office2: | Member of the Mississippi Senate |
Term2: | 1880-1884 |
Birth Date: | May 16, 1854 |
Birth Place: | Lawrence County, Mississippi |
Death Place: | Jackson, Mississippi |
Profession: | Lawyer |
Spouse: | Marion Buckley |
Andrew Houston Longino (May 16, 1854 – February 24, 1942) was an American politician from Mississippi who served as a Democrat in the Mississippi State Senate (1880–1884), the U.S. District Attorney's (1888–1890), and Governor's offices (1900–1904).
Longino was born in Lawrence County, Mississippi. He attained education at Mississippi College, where he graduated in 1875, and at the University of Virginia, where he earned a law degree in 1880.
The surname Longino is of Italian origin, although his family had resided in the American South since the eighteenth century.[1] He has been identified as the third U.S. governor of Italian-American descent, after Caesar Rodney and William Paca who held office in the 18th century and had distant Italian ancestry.[2]
During his term as governor, Longino began a campaign to attract new industries to the state. He supervised designing and building a new Mississippi State Capitol still in use today. Also of note, the Mississippi Department of Archives and History was created and a new penitentiary at Parchman Farm was constructed during his administration.[3]
Governor Longino invited president Theodore Roosevelt to a bear hunt in the Mississippi Delta, an event which inspired the creation of the teddy bear.[4]
Longino died at age 87 and was interred at Cedar Lawn Cemetery in Jackson, Mississippi.