Dennis Murphree (born January 6, 1886 in Pittsboro, Mississippi; died February 9, 1949 in Pittsboro, Mississippi) succeeded Paul B. Johnson Sr. as the forty-seventh Governor of Mississippi, serving between December 26, 1943 and January 18, 1944. Following the end of Murphree's term as Governor, Thomas L. Bailey (born January 6, 1888 near Maben, Mississippi; died November 2, 1946 in Jackson, Mississippi) became the forty-eighth Governor of Mississippi, serving between January 18, 1944 and November 2, 1946.
David A. Holmes was the first governor of Mississippi and the fifth governor also.
Mississippi Governor's Mansion was created in 1839.
Paul B. Johnson Sr. (born March 23, 1880 in Hillsboro, Mississippi; died December 26, 1943 in Hattiesburg, Mississippi) succeeded Hugh L. White as the forty-sixth Governor of Mississippi, serving between January 16, 1940 and his death. Following Johnson's death, Dennis Murphree (born January 6, 1886 in Pittsboro, Mississippi; died February 9, 1949 in Pittsboro, Mississippi) became the forty-seventh Governor of Mississippi, serving between December 26, 1943 and January 18, 1944.
The current Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi is Tate Reeves. Reeves assumed office as Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi on January 10, 2012.
Thomas L. Bailey (born January 6, 1888 near Maben, Mississippi; died November 2, 1946 in Jackson, Mississippi) succeeded Dennis Murphree as the forty-eighth Governor of Mississippi, serving between January 18, 1944 and November 2, 1946. Following the end of Bailey's term as Governor, Fielding L. Wright (born May 16, 1895 in Rolling Fork, Mississippi; died May 4, 1956 in Jackson, Mississippi) became the forty-ninth Governor of Mississippi, serving between November 2, 1946 and January 22, 1952.
Tate Reeves was the Mississippi Lieutenant Governor in 2013.
the governor lives in blackjack
Ellis Arnall was the governor of Georgia in 1944. Arnall served as governor of Georgia from January 12, 1943 to January 14, 1947.
the Mississippi govener is Haley Barbour
John J Pettus was the Governor of Mississippi when Mississippi seceded. John Pettus served as Mississippi Governor November 21, 1859 - November 16, 1863. On January 9, 1861 Mississippi became the second southern state to declare its secession from the Union.
Republican Haley Barbour was Governor of Mississippi from January 13, 2004 until January 10, 2012.
There was no governor of Mississippi at the time. The Constitutional Convention took place in 1787, but the first governor of Mississippi, Winthrop Sargent, wasn't appointed until 1798, close to 11 years after the Convention.