The Eighth Oklahoma Legislature was a meeting of the legislative branch of the government of Oklahoma, composed of the Oklahoma Senate and the Oklahoma House of Representatives. The state legislature met in Oklahoma City, in regular session from January 4 to April 2, 1921, and in special session from April 25 to May 21, 1921, during the third year of the term of Governor James B.A. Robertson.[1] It was the first time, Republicans took control of the Oklahoma House of Representatives.[2] In 1920, Bessie McColgin, a Republican, became the first woman elected to the Oklahoma House of Representatives.[3] Lamar Looney, Oklahoma's first female state senator and a Democrat, was also elected in 1920.[4]
8th Oklahoma Legislature | |
---|---|
Leadership | |
T. C. Simpson (D) | |
Composition: |
Impeachment charges were brought against lieutenant governor in the Oklahoma House of Representatives, but not sustained by the state senate.
T. C. Simpson served as the President pro tempore of the Oklahoma Senate and George Blaine Schwabe served as the Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives.
Dates of sessions
edit- Regular session: January 4-April 2, 1921
- Special session: April 25-May 21, 1921
Previous: 7th Legislature • Next: 9th Legislature
Major events
edit- on Republicans held the majority of seats in the Oklahoma House of Representatives for the first time in state history, allowing them to select the chamber's leaders.[2]
- The first female state legislators in Oklahoma served in the 1921 session.[3]
- The Republican-dominated House brought impeachment charges against Lieutenant Governor Martin Trapp and narrowly failed to approve impeachment charges against both the state treasurer and Oklahoma Governor James Robertson. The Democratic-dominated Senate did not sustain the impeachment charges against Trapp.[5]
Party composition
editSenate
editAffiliation | Party (Shading indicates majority caucus)
|
Total | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Republican | |||
27 | 17 | 44 | ||
Voting share | 61.4% | 38.6% |
House of Representatives
editAffiliation | Party (Shading indicates majority caucus)
|
Total | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | Democratic | |||
73 | 36 | 109 | ||
Voting share | 67% | 33% |
Leadership
editT. C. Simpson of Thomas, Oklahoma, served as President pro tempore of the Oklahoma Senate in 1921.[6] George B. Schwabe was Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives.[1]
Members
editSenate
editDistrict | Name | Party |
---|---|---|
Lt Gov | Martin E. Trapp | Dem |
1 | M. W. Pugh | Dem |
2 | C. B. Leedy | Rep |
2 | James Spurlock | Dem |
3 | William Briggs | Rep |
4 | Mrs. Lamar Looney | Dem |
5 | Harry Cordell | Dem |
6 | James Land | Rep |
6 | T. C. Simpson | Dem |
7 | Joe Sherman | Rep |
8 | Harry Glasser | Rep |
9 | W. T. Clark | Rep |
10 | Roy Harvey | Rep |
11 | M. F. Ingraham | Rep |
12 | John Golobie | Rep |
13 | Charles Wells | Rep |
13 | M. W. Lynch | Rep |
14 | T. F. Hensley | Dem |
14 | Ross Lillard | Dem |
15 | C. A. Dearmon | Dem |
15 | L. L. West | Dem |
16 | H. Brown | Rep |
17 | L. A. Morton | Dem |
17 | Jed Johnson | Dem |
18 | James Draughon | Dem |
18 | John Carlock | Dem |
19 | W. R. Wallace | Dem |
19 | W. H. Woods | Dem |
20 | C. E. McPherren | Dem |
20 | Wilburn Cartwright | Dem |
21 | J. E. Fleming | Dem |
22 | Tom Anglin | Dem |
23 | Luther Harrison | Dem |
24 | William J. Holloway | Dem |
25 | E. P. Hill | Dem |
26 | Joe Ratliff | Dem |
27 | Clark Nichols | Dem |
27 | Samuel Morton Rutherford | Dem |
28 | E. M. Frye | Rep |
29 | Pete Coyne | Dem |
30 | Horace Durant | Rep |
31 | R. L. Davidson | Dem |
32 | Glen Horner | Rep |
33 | E. E. Woods | Rep |
34 | J. Corbett Cornett | Rep |
- Table based on state almanac.[6]
House of Representatives
editName | Party | County |
---|---|---|
W. A. Scofield | Rep | Adair |
Leslie Salter | Rep | Alfalfa |
F. C. Johnson | Dem | Atoka |
J. W. Steffen | Rep | Beaver, Harper |
W. A. Hornbeck | Dem | Beckham |
L. A. Everhart | Rep | Blaine |
Porter Newman | Dem | Bryan |
J. B. Smith | Dem | Bryan |
T. F. Cummings | Rep | Caddo |
T. C. Ottinger | Rep | Caddo |
J. L. Trevathan Thompson | Rep | Canadian |
D. S. Hoover | Dem | Carter |
Bruce Keenan | Rep | Cherokee |
D. A. Stovall | Dem | Choctaw |
John Q. Denny | Rep | Cimarron, Texas |
Ralph Hardie | Rep | Cleveland |
Austin Rice | Rep | Coal |
Thornton Clark | Rep | Comanche |
Leroy Elmore | Dem | Cotton |
P. Z. Newman | Rep | Craig |
Eli Admire | Rep | Creek |
W. D. Crane | Rep | Custer |
James Butler | Rep | Delaware |
Otto Smith | Rep | Dewey |
G. E. Davison | Rep | Ellis |
J. B. Campbell | Rep | Garfield |
L. G. Gossett | Rep | Garfield |
J. S. Garrison | Dem | Garvin |
A. L. Davis | Dem | Grady |
M. B. Louthan | Dem | Grady |
T. E. Beck | Rep | Grant |
Horace Simpson | Dem | Greer |
L. A. Pearson | Dem | Harmon |
John Ogle | Rep | Haskell |
Ben F. Harrison | Dem | Hughes |
Ed Dabney | Dem | Jackson |
J. M Roberson | Dem | Jefferson |
Hugh Jones | Dem | Johnston |
F. A. Heberling | Rep | Kay |
W. P. Kimerer | Rep | Kingfisher |
S. D. Bailey | Rep | Kiowa |
George Mitchell | Rep | Kiowa |
Arthur Smallwood | Rep | Latimer |
Sam Neely | Dem | LeFlore |
J. T. White | Rep | LeFlore |
B. Taylor | Rep | Lincoln |
M. M. Watson | Rep | Lincoln |
William Dodd | Rep | Logan |
E. G. Sharp | Rep | Logan |
J. C. Graham | Dem | Love |
Roy Harp | Rep | Major |
Marvin Shilling | Dem | Marshall |
Will Crockett | Rep | Mayes |
Murray Gibbons | Dem | McClain |
James Dyer Jr. | Dem | McCurtain |
Charles Whitaker | Dem | McIntosh |
Jess Pullen | Dem | Murray |
Wesley E. Disney | Dem | Muskogee |
Perry Miller | Dem | Muskogee |
J. F. Strayhorn | Dem | Muskogee |
H. E. Keim | Rep | Noble |
George B. Schwabe | Rep | Nowata |
T. W. Harman | Rep | Okfuskee |
Thomas Gorman | Dem | Oklahoma |
I. L. Harris | Rep | Oklahoma |
John Jerkins | Dem | Oklahoma |
W. W. Robertson | Dem | Oklahoma |
Clarence Tylee | Rep | Okmulgee |
L. A. Wismeyer | Rep | Osage |
James Miller | Rep | Ottawa |
W. S. Caldwell | Rep | Pawnee |
Charles Platt | Rep | Payne |
Charles Brice | Dem | Pittsburg |
R. H. Matthews | Rep | Pittsburg |
W. O. Pratt | Dem | Pittsburg |
C. A. Knight | Dem | Pontotoc |
W. S. Pendleton | Dem | Pottawatomie |
Victor Locke Jr. | Rep | Pushmataha |
Bessie McColgin | Rep | Roger Mills |
Harry Jennings | Rep | Rogers |
D. O. Jennings | Rep | Seminole |
R. A. Balance | Rep | Sequoyah |
James C. Nance | Dem | Stephens |
H. R. King | Dem | Tillman |
Bailey Bell | Rep | Tulsa |
Remington Rogers | Rep | Tulsa |
W. T. Drake | Rep | Wagoner |
A. E. Craver | Rep | Washington |
W. T. Graves | Dem | Washita |
E. A. Herod | Rep | Woods |
Jerry Coover | Rep | Woodward |
- Table based on government database.[7]
References
edit- ^ a b A Century to Remember Archived September 10, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Okhouse.gov. (accessed June 20, 2013)
- ^ a b Hannemann, Carolyn G. Schwabe, George Blaine (1886-1952) Archived 2012-11-19 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. (accessed April 29, 2013)
- ^ a b Pappas, Christine. McColgin, Amelia Elizabeth Simison (1875-1972 Archived 2014-12-07 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture] (accessed May 9, 2013)
- ^ Pappas, Christine. Looney, Lamar (1871-1935) Archived 2013-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (accessed May 9, 2013)
- ^ O'Dell, Larry. Robertson, James Brooks Ayers (1871-1938) Archived 2013-10-05 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Archived 2009-01-05 at the Wayback Machine (accessed May 11, 2013)
- ^ a b Oklahoma Almanac, 2005 Archived 2006-02-18 at the Wayback Machine, Oklahoma Department of Libraries (accessed July 1, 2013)
- ^ Historic Members Archived 2013-07-11 at the Wayback Machine, Okhouse.gov (accessed June 21, 2013)