Birth Date: | 24 May 1852 |
Termend3: | January 1900 |
Predecessor: | A. C. Anderson |
Party: | Democratic |
Birth Place: | Hardin County, Tennessee, U.S. |
Termend4: | January 1888 |
Termstart4: | January 1884 |
District4: | Tishomingo County |
State House4: | Mississippi |
Termstart3: | 1890 |
State Senate1: | Mississippi |
Termend2: | January 1908 |
Termstart2: | January 1904 |
Termend1: | January 1920 |
Termstart1: | January 1912 |
District1: | 37th |
Termend: | January 1920 |
Termstart: | January 1916 |
Office: | President pro tempore of the Mississippi State Senate |
Successor: | J. D. Fatheree |
Successor1: | Edward Strickland |
Carroll Kendrick (May 24, 1852 – February 17, 1923) was a Mississippi state legislator in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was the President Pro Tempore of the Mississippi State Senate from 1916 to 1920.
Carroll Kendrick was born on May 24, 1852, near Hamburg, in Hardin County, Tennessee.[1] [2] [3] [4] He was the son of Allen Kendrick and Nancy (Rose) Kendrick. He graduated from the Iuka Normal Institute with an A. B., and from Hiram College with a M. A. degree. In 1873, he graduated from the University of Louisville with an M. D. degree. During Reconstruction, he was a member of the Ku Klux Klan.[5]
From 1884 to 1888, he served in the Mississippi House of Representatives, representing Tishomingo County as a Democrat.[6] [7] He was then in the Mississippi State Senate, representing the state's 37th district, which was composed of the state's Tishomingo, Alcorn, and Prentiss counties, from 1890 to 1900. He was re-elected in 1903, for the 1904–1908 term, and in 1911, for the 1912–1916 term. In 1907, he was the president of Mississippi's state Medical Association. Kendrick was re-elected to the Senate for the 1916–1920 term, in which he also served the position of president pro tempore.[8] Kendrick died on February 17, 1923.[9]