Charles Hillman Brough (born July 9, 1876 in Clinton, Mississippi; died December 26, 1935 in Washington DC) succeeded George Washington Hays as the twenty-fifth Governor of Arkansas, serving between January 10, 1917 and January 11, 1921. Following the end of Brough's term as Governor, Thomas Chipman McRae (born December 21, 1851 in Union County, Arkansas; died June 2, 1929 in Prescott, Arkansas) became the twenty-sixth Governor of Arkansas, serving between January 11, 1921 and January 13, 1925.
He was state attorney general and governor of Arkansas.
Thomas Chipman McRae (born December 21, 1851 in Union County, Arkansas; died June 2, 1929 in Prescott, Arkansas) succeeded Charles Hillman Brough as the twenty-sixth Governor of Arkansas, serving between January 11, 1921 and January 13, 1925, including the whole of 1922.
Thomas Chipman McRae (born December 21, 1851 in Union County, Arkansas; died June 2, 1929 in Prescott, Arkansas) succeeded Charles Hillman Brough as the twenty-sixth Governor of Arkansas, serving between January 11, 1921 and January 13, 1925, including the whole of 1923.
Arkansas does not have a president, it has a governor. The governor is Mike Beebe.
He was the Governor of Arkansas.
He was the Governor of Arkansas.
Asa Hutchinson is the 46th and current Governor of Arkansas.
Bill Clinton was not the governor of Arkansas when Hillary Clinton passed the Arkansas bar exam. Both Bill Clinton and Hillary were teachers at a University in Arkansas before he became the Governor of Arkansas.
Jeff Davis - Arkansas governor - was born on 1862-05-06.
Jeff Davis - Arkansas governor - died on 1913-01-03.
Bill Clinton was governor of Arkansas before he was elected president.
An Arkansas Governor may serve no more than two four-year terms.