- Warren E. Hearnes
Warren Eastman Hearnes (born
July 24 ,1923 ) is an American politician who was Governor ofMissouri from 1965 to 1973. He was the first Missouri Governor eligible to serve two consecutive four year terms. He is a Democrat. He is married to Betty C. Hearnes, a former Missouri State Representative and Democratic Party nominee for Governor in 1988.Born in
Moline, Illinois , Hearnes moved toCharleston, Missouri as a child. He still resides there. After high school, he enrolled at the University of Missouri where he attended for a year and a half until he was drafted. Soon after reporting for duty, Hearnes was appointed by President Roosevelt to theUnited States Military Academy atWest Point , Class of 1946 [Crouse, R.: Warren Eastman Hearnes: A Memoir. 2007, p. 14.] . He served in the U.S. Army and was medically discharged in 1949. He was a 1952 graduate of theUniversity of Missouri School of Law. Hearnes was a member of theMissouri House of Representatives from 1950 to 1961. He then served as Missouri Secretary of State from 1961 to 1965. He was electedgovernor in 1964 and re-elected in 1968. Hearnes was the first Governor of Missouri to serve eight consecutive years in office.Hearnes' priorities as Governor included improving public education, improving the state's highways and traffic safety, as well as civil rights and the environment. State aid to public schools increased from $145.5 million to $389.2 million during Hearnes' term as governor, an increase of 167%, and he also increased state aid to higher education from $47.5 million to $144.7 million, an increase of 204%. He also oversaw the increase of state aid to vocational education from $856,000 to $8.8 million dollars, fostering the establishment 53 new area vocational educational schools. While Hearnes was Governor, the State of Missouri built 350 miles of four-lane highways throughout the state. He also created the
Missouri Division of Highway Safety and enacted a law providing mandatory breath tests for suspected drunken drivers. Hearnes increased uniform strength of theMissouri State Highway Patrol from 500 to 750 officers.Hearnes was Governor during the Civil Rights era and as Governor he signed a
Public Accommodations Law , Missouri's first civil rights act. As governor he also strengthened theFair Employment Practices Act and increased the staff of theHuman Rights Commission from two employees to 35. Hearnes also enacted the state’s firstair pollution law, with subsequent strengthening of its provisions. He oversaw the passage of a $150 million water pollution bond issue to provide state matching funds for sewage control construction projects, and created the state’sClean Water Commission to enforce water pollution laws. He also was responsible for the provision of first state financial grants for mass transit and urban rapid transit facilities. He created theDepartment of Community Affairs to assist local governments in obtaining technical assistance and grants for city planning, zoning, housing, sewage treatment, industrial development, and other municipal and regional projects.In 1972, the then-new athletic facility at the University of Missouri was named the
Hearnes Center in honor of the outgoing governor of the state.After leaving the Governor's office, Hearnes ran for
United State Senate in 1976. He lost the Democratic primary election, but was chosen as the party's nominee by the Missouri Democratic Party's state committee to replace CongressmanJerry Litton , who was tragically killed in a plane crash enroute to a primary election victory party. Hearnes lost the general election toJohn Danforth . Two years later, he ran unsuccessfully for Missouri state auditor in 1978, losing the general election to RepublicanJim Antonio . In 1980, Hearnes served as aCircuit Court Judge, making him the first person inMissouri history to serve in all three branches of the state government.In 2005, Governor and Mrs. Hearnes were awarded the Edwin P. Hubble Medal of Initiative during the Charleston Dogwood-Azalea Festival. The medal was presented by a delegation of citizens from Marshfield, Missouri. The medal is the city of Marshfield's highest honor and is named for the native son. In 2008 Governor and Mrs. Hearnes endorsed the campaign of
Hillary Clinton for the Democratic presidential nomination.Notes and references
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