Gordon Hickman Garland Explained

Gordon Hickman Garland
Order:48th Speaker of the California State Assembly
Term Start:January 29, 1940
Term End:January 18, 1942
Predecessor:Paul Peek
Successor:Charles W. Lyon
State Assembly1:California
District1:38th
Term1:January 4, 1937 – January 4, 1943
Preceded1:Ford A. Chatters
Succeeded1:Walter J. Fourt
Birth Name:Gordon Garland
Birth Date:May 16, 1898
Birth Place:Lebanon, Missouri
Death Place:Exeter, California
Party:Democrat
Spouse:Chinina Garland
Children:4
Profession:Legislator, Rancher, Director of DMV, CHP Commissioner, Lobbyist

Gordon Hickman Garland (May 16, 1898  - May 20, 1986)[1] was a conservative Democratic California state legislator and the 48th Speaker of the California State Assembly. Garland also served as Director of the Department of Motor Vehicles in the 1940s and was also Commissioner of the California Highway Patrol. After leaving state government, he became a lobbyist for the Golden Gate Bridge District, the California Water Association, and the California Chiropractic Association and was widely regarded as an expert on water issues in California. Garland was one of ten legislators that wrote the legislation to create the Central Valley Project.

During his Speakership between 1940 and 1942, Garland was often at odds with Governor Culbert L. Olson, a fellow Democrat. Governor Olson's staff was implicated in an electronic eavesdropping scheme in 1940, when bugging devices were discovered in Garland's hotel room in Sacramento.[2]

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Notes and References

  1. News: Famed for Clashes With Governor : Ex-Speaker Gordon Garland Dies at 88. 1986-05-24. Los Angeles Times. 2018-07-13. en-US. 0458-3035.
  2. LA Times, "Assembly Opens Probe of Garland Spy Plot," Feb. 22, 1940, p. 1.