Charles W. Lippett (born October 8, 1846 in Providence, Rhode Island; died April 4, 1924 in Harmon, New York) succeeded D. Russell Brown as the forty-fourth Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 29, 1895 and May 25, 1897.
Following the end of Lippett's term as Governor of Rhode Island, Elisha Dyer Jr. (born November 29, 1839 in Providence, Rhode Island; died November 29, 1906 in Providence, Rhode Island) became the forty-fifth Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 25, 1897 and May 29, 1900.
Elisha Dyer Jr. (born November 29, 1839 in Providence, Rhode Island; died November 29, 1906 in Providence, Rhode Island) succeeded Charles W. Lippitt as the forty-fifth Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 25, 1897 and May 29, 1900, including the whole of 1898.
Elisha Dyer Jr. (born November 29, 1839 in Providence, Rhode Island; died November 29, 1906 in Providence, Rhode Island) succeeded Charles W. Lippitt as the forty-fifth Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 25, 1897 and May 29, 1900, including the whole of 1899.
Flag of Rhode Island was created in 1897.
In 1897.
William Greene - Rhode Island governor - died in 1809.
William Greene - Rhode Island governor - was born in 1731.
The current Governor of Rhode Island is Lincoln Chafee. Chafee assumed office as the 74th Governor of Rhode Island on January 4, 2011.
Charles W. Lippett (born October 8, 1846 in Providence, Rhode Island; died April 4, 1924 in Harmon, New York) succeeded D. Russell Brown as the forty-fourth Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 29, 1895 and May 25, 1897, including the whole of 1896.
D. Russell Brown (born March 28, 1848 in Bolton, Connecticut; died February 28, 1919 in Providence, Rhode Island) succeeded Herbert W. Ladd as the forty-third Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 31, 1892 and May 29, 1895. Following the end of Brown's term as Governor of Rhode Island, Charles W. Lippett (born October 8, 1846 in Providence, Rhode Island; died April 4, 1924 in Harmon, New York) became the forty-fourth Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 29, 1895 and May 25, 1897.
Rhode Island has a governor and a bicameral legislature.
Nicholas Cooke (born February 3, 1717 in Providence, Rhode Island; died September 14, 1782 in Providence, Rhode Island), the first Governor of Rhode Island, served between November 7, 1775 and May 4, 1778.
Donald Carcieri.