Howard Belton Explained

Howard C. Belton
Birth Date:January 2, 1893
Birth Place:Algona, Iowa, U.S.
Death Place:Salem, Oregon, U.S.
Office:Oregon State Treasurer
Term Start:January 4, 1960
Term End:January 4, 1965
Governor:Mark Hatfield
Predecessor:Sig Unander
Successor:Robert W. Straub
Office2:President of the Oregon State Senate
Term2:1945 - 1946
Succeeded2:Marshall E. Cornett
Office3:Member of the Oregon State Senate
Term Start3:1938
Term End3:1959
Constituency3:Clackamas County
Term Start4:1932
Term End4:1934
Party:Republican
Occupation:Farmer
Spouse:Mae Brown Belton
Children:4

Howard C. Belton (January 2, 1893 – November 21, 1988) was an American farmer from the state of Oregon. A native of Algona, Iowa, he served as the nineteenth Treasurer of the State of Oregon after appointment by Oregon Governor Mark O. Hatfield. A Republican, he had previously served one term in the Oregon House of Representatives and five terms in the Oregon State Senate.

Early life

Belton was born in Algona, Iowa, on January 2, 1893.[1] At seventeen he moved to Los Angeles, California. In 1915 he enrolled at the Oregon Agricultural College (now Oregon State University) to study animal husbandry.[2] He operated a farm in Canby, Oregon, from 1917 to 1960.

Belton was an active member of the Canby community. He served on the Canby Union School Board, was a president of both the Canby Kiwanis Club and Canby Chamber of Commerce, and also a founding board member of the Canby Union Bank.[2]

Political career

Belton was elected to the Oregon House of Representatives in 1932, the same year that Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt beat President Herbert Hoover in Oregon by twenty-one points.[3]

In 1938 he won a seat in the Oregon State Senate. Belton sat on the Ways and Means Committee. He served as President of the Oregon State Senate for the 1945 - 1947 biennium.[4] During the 1945 session Governor Earl Snell called for legislation to create a Tax Study Committee, with the original purpose of,

engaging the services of a nationally recognized firm of tax experts for the purpose of a complete survey, examination and analysis of all phases of our tax structure and report to the Legislature with recommendations as to the most attractive, advantageous and equitable tax system consistently possible for Oregon to devise.

State Senator Belton was a member of the Tax Study Committee and their finished report was ready for review by the 1947 legislature.[5]

In 1948 Belton sought the Republican nomination for State Treasurer and won. He would lose the general election narrowly to Democrat Walter J. Pearson (49.6% - 50.3%).[6] He would continue to serve in the Oregon State Senate until his retirement in 1959.

At the request of Governor Mark Hatfield, Belton came out of his short retirement and was appointed to fill the vacancy created after State Treasurer Sig Unander resigned from office.[7] In the fall of 1960, he won his own term beating Democratic State Senator Ward H. Cook.[7] He would only serve one term as Treasurer before retiring from politics again, serving from January 4, 1960, to January 4, 1965.[7]

Belton was a delegate to the Republican conventions of 1944, 1952 and 1956.

Later years

In his later years Belton was very productive in his community. He was member of the First Presbyterian Church in Salem and a member of the board of trustees of Lewis & Clark College for 15 years. Belton was also a member of the Salvation Army advisory board in Salem from 1963 to 1972 and served as chairman in 1968.[2]

His wife Mae died in 1982. Belton died on November 21, 1988, at the age of 95 due to pneumonia. He is interred at Belcrest Memorial Park in Salem.[2]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://ssdi.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi Howard C. Belton
  2. "Obituaries", The Oregonian, November 23, 1988.
  3. http://www.uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/state.php?f=0&fips=41&year=1932 Oregon 1932 Presidential Results
  4. https://sos.oregon.gov/archives/Pages/records/legislators_guide.aspx Oregon Legislators and Staff Guide: 1945 Regular Session
  5. https://sos.oregon.gov/archives/Pages/records/governors_guides.aspx Governor's Message 1947
  6. Newbry, Earl T. Oregon Blue Book. Salem, Oregon: Office of the Secretary of State, 1952
  7. Web site: Oregon State Treasury Administrative Overview . Oregon Blue Book. Oregon Secretary of State. 2008-11-25.