Benjamin S. Paulen | |
Order1: | 23rd |
Office1: | Governor of Kansas |
Term Start1: | January 12, 1925 |
Term End1: | January 14, 1929 |
Lieutenant1: | De Lanson Alson Newton Chase |
Predecessor1: | Jonathan M. Davis |
Successor1: | Clyde M. Reed |
Order2: | 23rd |
Office2: | Lieutenant Governor of Kansas |
Term Start2: | January 9, 1923 |
Term End2: | January 12, 1925 |
Governor2: | Jonathan M. Davis |
Predecessor2: | Charles Solomon Huffman |
Successor2: | De Lanson Alson Newton Chase |
Office3: | Member of the Kansas Senate |
Term3: | 1911–1919 |
Birth Date: | July 14, 1869 |
Birth Place: | DeWitt County, Illinois, U.S. |
Death Place: | Fredonia, Kansas, U.S. |
Spouse: | Barbara Ellis |
Profession: | hardware clerk, banker, politician |
Party: | Republican |
Benjamin Sanford Paulen (July 14, 1869 – July 11, 1961) was an American banker and the 23rd Governor of Kansas from 1925 to 1929. He served as mayor of Fredonia, Kansas and in the Kansas Senate.
Paulen was born in DeWitt County, Illinois to Jacob Walter and Lucy Bell (Johnson) Paulen. The family moved to Wilson County, Kansas, in late 1869 when he was less than six months old. He graduated from Fredonia High School in 1887 and took one term at Kansas University.[1] He took a course at Bryant and Stratton Business College in Saint Louis, Missouri, and then worked in his father's merchandise store in 1889. He married Barbara Ellis in Holton, Kansas, on February 14, 1900, and they had no children.
Paulen served as city councilman, city treasurer, and then mayor of Fredonia. He was elected in 1912 and re-elected in 1916 to the Kansas State Senate. In 1922 Paulen was elected Lieutenant Governor of Kansas.
Paulen received support from the Ku Klux Klan during the Republican gubernatorial primary election in 1924.[2]
Paulen was elected and reelected to serve two terms as Governor of Kansas from 1925 to 1929. During that time, he signed the 1927 Kindergarten Bill into law,[3] cigarette sales became legal and taxed, a state gasoline tax was sanctioned, an insurance code was established, and a banking board was organized.
Paulen served as President of the Kansas Bankers Association and was a member of the executive council of the American Bankers Association.[4] He was a member of the state's constitutional revision committee in 1957.
Paulen died in 1961 in Fredonia, Kansas. He is interred at Fredonia City Cemetery. Ben S. Paulen Elementary School in Fredonia, now part of Fredonia High School, was named in his honor in 1961.