John Gardiner Richards Jr. Explained

John Gardiner Richards Jr.
Image Name:John Gardiner Richards, Jr..jpg
Order:96th
Office:Governor of South Carolina
Term Start:January 18, 1927
Term End:January 20, 1931
Lieutenant:Thomas Bothwell Butler
Predecessor:Thomas Gordon McLeod
Successor:Ibra Charles Blackwood
Office2:Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from Kershaw County
Term2:January 10, 1899  - January 10, 1911
Birth Date:11 September 1864
Birth Place:Liberty Hill, South Carolina, C.S.A.
Death Place:Liberty Hill, South Carolina

John Gardiner Richards Jr. (September 11, 1864October 9, 1941) was the 96th Governor of South Carolina from 1927 to 1931.

Biography

He was born in Liberty Hill, South Carolina, on September 11, 1864, to John G. Richards and Sophia Edwards Smith.

He attended schools in Liberty Hill and North Carolina's Bingham Military Institute for a short time.

In 1898, he was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives.In 1910, he was appointed as the South Carolina Railroad Commissioner.

The South Carolina Constitution had been amended in 1926 to give the governor a four-year term, and Richards became the first South Carolina governor elected for a four-year term. His time as governor was noted for his strict observance of Blue laws, even chastising golfers for playing on Sunday.[1]

He died on October 9, 1941, in Liberty Hill, South Carolina.

External links

Notes and References

  1. From Walter Edgar's South Carolina: A History, p. 484: