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Andrew Houston Longino: Thirty-fifth Governor of Mississippi: 1900-1904
By David G. Sansing
Governor Andrew Longino was a pivotal figure in Mississippi history.
He was the first governor elected after the American Civil War who was
not a Confederate veteran, and he was the last governor to be nominated
by a state party convention. In 1903 the state adopted the popular primary
system of nominating all candidates for public office.
As the first governor of the 20th century, which contemporaries called
the “Century of Light” and the “Century of Progress,”
Governor Longino warned the people of Mississippi to brace themselves
for the enormous changes that the 20th century would bring. He especially
urged Mississippians to embrace the new age of technology that could revolutionize
the state’s economy and provide thousands of new jobs.
A graduate of Mississippi College in Clinton, Longino was the first governor
to hold a degree from a Mississippi institution of higher learning. Longino
was born in Lawrence County, Mississippi, on May 16, 1854, and, after
taking a law course at the University of Virginia, was admitted to the
state bar in 1881. Prior to his election as governor in 1899, Longino
served in the Mississippi Legislature, as a district attorney, and as
chancellor of the seventh judicial district.
During Governor Longino’s administration, President Theodore Roosevelt
went bear hunting in the Mississippi Delta. His local guide on that now
famous hunt was Holt Collier, an African American who had fought with
the Confederate Army during the Civil War. It was on that hunt that President
Roosevelt refused to shoot a tethered bear. His sportsmanship received
extensive coverage in the national press and a Brooklyn toy manufacturer,
who saw a cartoon depicting Teddy Roosevelt’s refusal to shot the
bear, began producing the now famous “Teddy Bear.”
Governor Longino’s administration was noted for several major accomplishments.
A bill authorizing a new capitol was passed and its cornerstone was laid
June 3, 1903. A new state penitentiary was built at Parchman, the Mississippi
Department of Archives and History was established, a constitutional amendment
providing for the election of state judges was passed, and a textile school
was started at Mississippi A & M College in Starkville, now Mississippi
State University.
While still in office, Governor Longino ran for the United States Senate
in 1903, but was defeated by Hernando DeSoto Money. After leaving office
in January 1904, Governor Longino maintained a law practice in Jackson.
In 1919 he ran for governor, but was defeated in a run-off election by
Lee Russell. Following that defeat, Longino retired from public life.
On February 24, 1942, Governor Longino died at Jackson.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted January 2004
Sources:
Buchanan, Minor. Holt Collier, His Life, His Roosevelt Hunts, and
the Origin of the Teddy Bear. Jackson: Centennial Press, 2002.
Kelly, Thomas E. Who’s Who in Mississippi (Jackson, 1914),
76.
Mississippi Official and Statistical Register (1912), 80.
Rowland, Dunbar. Mississippi Comprising Sketches in Cyclopedic Form
II, 113-117.
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