Roy W. Johnson (politician) explained

Roy W. Johnson
Order1:23rd Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska
Term Start1:January 7, 1943
Term End1:January 9, 1947
Governor1:Dwight Griswold
Predecessor1:William E. Johnson
Successor1:Robert B. Crosby
State Legislature2:Nebraska
District2:34th
Term2:1937–1939
Birth Date:19 June 1882
Birth Place:Weeping Water, Nebraska
Death Place:Chicago, Illinois
Party:Republican

Roy W. Johnson (June 19, 1882 – December 2, 1947) was a Nebraska politician who served as the 23rd lieutenant governor of Nebraska from 1943 to 1947. Johnson also served in the Nebraska Legislature from what was then the 34th District from 1937 to 1939.

Johnson was born in Weeping Water, Nebraska, in 1882. He graduated from high school in Sumner, Nebraska, and then went on to Lincoln Business College. He served on the school board in Sumner and in Buffalo County, Nebraska.[1] He defeated John R. Long in the November 1936 election for the 34th district of the Nebraska Legislature.[2] However, he failed to get re-nominated for a second term in the primary in August 1938.[3]

Johnson was elected Nebraska Lieutenant Governor in 1942, winning in a Republican primary field of seven candidates.[4] He was reelected in 1944.[5] However, prior to the Republican primaries in 1946, the Nebraska Republican Party met in a pre-primary convention to endorse particular candidates before the primaries. The convention endorsed recent Speaker of the Nebraska Legislature Robert B. Crosby instead of Johnson, who was the incumbent.[6] Some alleged that the reason Johnson was not endorsed was a perception among state legislators that he was not adept at presiding over the Nebraska Legislature or knowing the rules of procedure.[7] Johnson's lack of endorsement by the pre-primary convention was credited with his subsequent loss in the Republican primaries.[8]

Johnson died of a heart attack while attending a convention in Chicago on December 2, 1947.[9] [10]

Notes and References

  1. http://nlc1.nlc.state.ne.us/statepubsonline/pubs/legisbios/leg1938-1939.pdf Nebraska Blue Book 1938
  2. (4 November 1936). Record Vote Polled In County Supports Trend Over Country, Kearney Hub
  3. (11 August 1938). Only Three Solons Lose Out Tuesday, Kearney Hub
  4. Web site: Official Report of the Nebraska State Canvassing Board Primary Election August 11, 1942, General Election November 3, 1942. Frank Marsh. May 24, 2023.
  5. Web site: Official Report of the Nebraska State Canvassing Board Primary Election April 11, 1944, General Election November 7, 1944. Frank Marsh. May 24, 2023.
  6. News: GOP Delegates Go For Butler. Nebraska City News-Press. March 20, 1946. May 24, 2023. 3.
  7. News: Convention Future Gets Early Test As Result of Republican Conclave. Hastings Daily Tribune. March 21, 1946. May 24, 2023.
  8. News: Convention Backing Asset; Indorsed Candidates Win. Omaha World-Herald. June 12, 1946. May 24, 2023.
  9. (13 December 1947). The Final Curtain, Billboard (magazine), p. 47, 55.
  10. (3 December 1947). Roy W. Johnson, The New York Times