Finding Aid for the Anti Ben Hooper Election Handout, 1911
MS-2931University of Tennessee Special Collections Library, Knoxville, TN
Collection processed by: Anna Leigh Wooliver, November 29, 2006 Finding Aid written by: Anna Leigh Wooliver, November 29, 2006 Encoded by: Anna Leigh Wooliver, November 29, 2006
Summary Information
Anti-Ben Hooper Election Handout
Date/Date Range : 1911
0.1 linear feet
Abstract: This collection consists of an anti Ben Hooper handout circa 1911. Benjamin Hooper was running for governor of Tennessee at the time.
MS-2931
University of Tennessee Special Collections Library, Knoxville, TN
Access and Use
Purchased by Special Collections on September 25, 2006.
Collection is open for research.
The copyright interests in this collection remain with the creator. For more information, contact the Special Collections Library.
[Identification of Item], Anti Ben Hooper Election Handout, MS-2931. University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Special Collections Library.
Arrangement
This collection consists of a single folder
Biography / History
Ben Wade Hooper (1870--1957) was governor of Tennessee from 1911 to 1915. Hooper, who was of illegitimate birth, spent part of his childhood in an orphanage, was unofficially "adopted" by members of his rural church, and was belatedly acknowledged by his natural father, a prominent physician. He was a native of Newport in Cocke County, Tennessee. He was admitted to the bar in 1894, and served in the state legislature. He was a captain of volunteer forces in the Spanish-American War of 1898, and nominated by the Republicans for governor in 1910 over Alfred A. Taylor. His initial Democratic opponent, incumbent Governor Malcolm R. Patterson, withdrew. The Democrats then nominated United States Senator (and three-term former governor) Robert Love Taylor, Alf Taylor's younger brother.The Prohibition issue had badly split the Democrats and a faction of them called the "Independents" supported Hooper for governor, leading to his election. During legislative sessions during Hooper's administration, armed guards were employed. Nonetheless, he was reelected in 1912, but was subsequently defeated for a third term in 1914 by Democrat Thomas C. Rye, a Prohibition advocate. During his terms, early child labor laws were enacted and school attendance was made compulsory for young children provided that they lived within a realistic walking distance of a school. The method of the death penalty was changed from hanging to electrocution. Hooper continued the practice of law after his time as governor and maintained a keen interest in public affairs and Republican politics until just before his death in 1957. He wrote an autobiography, The Unwanted Boy, and was widely regarded in East Tennessee as an inspirational figure.
Collection Scope and Content Note
This collection consists of an anti Benjamin Hooper booklet concerning Hooper's involvement with the Textbook Law.
Subject Terms
- Elections -- Tennessee.
- Hooper, Ben Wade, 1870-1957.
- Tennessee -- Politics and government -- 1865-1950.
Contents List
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Folder
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Anti Ben Hooper Election Handout, 1911
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