Sam T. Taylor Explained

Samuel Tesitor Taylor
State Senate:Colorado
District:32nd
Term Start:1971
Term End:1974
Successor:Dan D. Noble
State Senate1:Colorado
District1:17th
Term Start1:1967
Term End1:1971
Predecessor1:Vincent Massari
Successor1:Ted L. Strickland
State Senate2:Colorado
District2:32nd
Term Start2:1965
Term End2:1967
State Senate3:Colorado
District3:14th
Term Start3:1934
Term End3:1965
Predecessor3:Adolph Unfug
Successor3:Ruth Stockton
Birth Name:Samuel Tesitor Taylor
Birth Date:4 January 1903
Birth Place:Hastings, Colorado, U.S.
Death Place:Trinidad, Colorado[1]
Party:Democratic
Spouse:Nina Taylor (née Luckenbaugh)
Children:Sam, Jr.
Residence:Walsenburg, Colorado
Profession:Attorney
Footnotes:[2] [3]

Samuel Tesitor Taylor (January4, 1903March23, 1977) was a Democratic state senator from Colorado, U.S. He served in the state senate for 40 years, from 1934 to 1974.[4] Born in Hastings, Colorado, the site of a former coal mine and now a ghost town, he later moved to Walsenburg, Colorado. Taylor worked as a coal miner and then earned a law degree at the University of Colorado before running for state senate. In Walsenburg, he worked as county attorney.

Elections

Taylor first ran for state office in 1934, seeking to represent District 14 in the Colorado Senate. He won the Democratic primary and the general election and began serving in the state senate in 1934. He was re-elected in 1938, 1942, 1946, 1950, 1954, 1958, and 1962. In 1964, following redistricting, he represented senate district 32 from 1965 to 1966. In 1966, he was elected to represent senate district 17 and served from 1967 to 1971. In 1970, he was elected to represent senate district 32 and served from 1971 to 1974, when he retired. He is the longest-serving legislator in Colorado history.[5]

In 1954, Taylor was a candidate for the office of Colorado Lieutenant Governor, but he was defeated by Frank L. Hays.

Senate leadership positions

During his term in the senate, Taylor served as senate minority leader in 1953, from 1955 to 1956, and from 1963 to 1970. He served as senate majority Leader from 1957 to 1960. He served as senate president pro tem from 1961 to 1962, and he served assenate assistant minority leader from 1971 to 1972. As senate president pro tem, he often served as acting governor.

Personal life and death

Sam Taylor married Nina Luckenbaugh in Boulder, Colorado on March 2, 1929.[6] During World War II, Taylor served as a captain in the United States Military.[7] Taylor died on March 23, 1977, aged 74, at Mt. San Rafael Hospital in Trinidad, Colorado, where he had been staying in a nursing home. He is buried at St. Mary North Cemetery in Walsenburg.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: . March 24, 1977 . Former state senator Sam Taylor dies at 74 . The Greeley Tribune . 15.
  2. Draft card for Samuel Tesitor Taylor accessed via Ancestry.com using The Wikipedia Library.
  3. Web site: Samuel Tesitore "Sam" Taylor . . n.d. . Legislator History Database — Colorado legislators past and present . Colorado General Assembly . May 20, 2024 .
  4. Web site: Sam T. Taylor (D) . . n.d. . Colorado Secretary of State . May 20, 2024 .
  5. . 1977 . Senate joint memorial no. 6 . Laws passed at the ... session of the General Assembly of the State of Colorado convened at Denver. . 51st . 2 . 1969 . May 20, 2024.
  6. Marriage record report for Samuel T. Taylor and Nina Luckenbaugh (no. A3339) accessed via Ancestry.com using The Wikipedia Library.
  7. Application for headstone or marker, VA form 40-1330, March 26, 1977, accessed on Ancestry.com using the Wikipedia Library.