- Ernest McFarland
Infobox Senator | name=Ernest W. McFarland
nationality=American
jr/sr=United States Senator
state=Arizona
party=Democratic
term=January 3 ,1941 -January 3 ,1953
preceded=Henry Fountain Ashurst
succeeded=Barry M. Goldwater
date of birth=birth date|1894|10|9|mf=y
place of birth=Earlsboro, Oklahoma
dead=dead
date of death=death date and age|1984|6|8|1894|10|9
place of death=Phoenix, Arizona
spouse=
religion=
footnote=
majorityleader3=8th
term_start3=January 3 ,1951
term_end3=January 3 ,1953
predecessor3=Scott W. Lucas
successor3=Robert A. Taft Ernest William McFarland (
October 9 ,1894 -June 8 ,1984 ), an Americanpolitician and, withWarren Atherton , is considered one of the "Fathers of theG.I. Bill ". He is the only Arizonan to serve in the highest office in all three branches of Arizona government--two at the state level, one at the federal level. He was a Democratic Senator fromArizona from 1941 to 1953 (Majority Leader from 1951 to 1953) before serving as theGovernor of Arizona from 1955 to 1959. Finally McFarland sat as Chief Justice on theArizona Supreme Court from 1968 to 1970.Early life
Born on a farm near
Earlsboro, Oklahoma onOctober 9 ,1894 . McFarland attended rural schools and graduated from East Central State Teachers' College,Ada, Oklahoma , in 1914 and from theUniversity of Oklahoma at Norman, in 1917.During
World War I he served in theUnited States Navy and nearly died of a bronchial infection. Followingsurgery by Navy surgeons he was discharged in 1919 and sent to live in a drier climate. Thus, after the war McFarland moved toPhoenix, Arizona and was employed as a clerk in a bank. He gathered enough money to pay for tuition and graduated with alaw andpolitical science degree fromStanford University in 1921. He moved back to Arizona, passed thebar exam , and commenced practice in Casa Grande. He soon developed an expertise in agricultural and water-uselegislation which would suit Arizona well in the future.Rise to prominence and Senatorship
After serving as the assistant
attorney general of Arizona from 1923 to 1924, county attorney of Pinal County from 1925 to 1930, andjudge of the superior court of Pinal County from 1934 to 1940, McFarland entered the Senate race in 1940. The twenty-eight-year Democratic incumbent,Henry F. Ashurst , appeared to be unbeatable and did not launch an aggressive campaign to retain his seat. While Ashurst remained inWashington , McFarland canvassed the state, giving speeches on water issues and the war inEurope . By a three-to-one margin, he defeated Ashurst in the primary and went on to win the general election.Senator McFarland along with Senator Hayden lobbied for the
Central Arizona Project aimed at providing Arizona's share of the Colorado River to the state. His efforts failed while he was a senator; however, they laid a critical foundation for the eventual passage of the CAP in the late 1960s.Not forgetting his veteran roots, McFarland became interested in legislation to benefit
veteran s returning fromWorld War II . He outlined his proposals before theAmerican Legion in a speech in 1943 and worked to create support for hisG.I. Bill with veteran's organizations and members of Congress.By unanimous votes, the
United States Senate and the House of Representatives approved the legislation in March and May, respectively and, onJune 22 ,1944 , President Franklin Roosevelt signed theG.I. Bill into law.McFarland was easily reelected Senator in 1946 and served as chairman of a Commerce subcommittee where he helped plan a post-war role for the U.S. in
international communications and rewrote theCommunications Act of 1934 . After Democratic Majority LeaderScott W. Lucas was defeated in 1950 due to his link with Truman's administration, McFarland's Democratic colleagues chose him as majority leader. He served as Majority Leader for two years. In 1952 he was defeated byBarry Goldwater in the national Republican landslide that year led byDwight D. Eisenhower .Governor of Arizona and the return to law
McFarland was elected governor of Arizona in 1954 and reelected in 1956. He worked with members of the Bureau of Reclamation to pick a location for the
Glen Canyon Dam and emphasized education during his two terms in office.Shortly after he returned from the Senate, he and several friends formed the Arizona Television Company to start a
television station in Phoenix. McFarland had long been intrigued by the still-new medium. In 1955, shortly after he became governor, he openedKTVK , Phoenix's third television station. He chose the call letters "because TV would be our middle name." KTVK was the ABC affiliate for much of Arizona until 1995, and then became one of the nation's most successful independent stations. It remained in his family's hands until 1999.McFarland tried unsuccessfully to unseat Goldwater in 1958. After serving as governor he returned to his law practice and was elected associate justice of the Arizona Supreme Court in 1964. He took part in "
Miranda v. Arizona " and became Chief Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court in 1968 till 1970 thus completing a political "grand slam."Later life and death
In his mid-seventies he served as the director of
Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco and president of theArizona Television Company before dying in Phoenix onJune 8 ,1984 .There is now a monument at the
Arizona State Capitol honoring him as the "Father of the G.I. Bill." Also, theMcFarland State Historic Park inFlorence, Arizona contains a preservedcourthouse and other buildings from when Arizona was just a territory in 1878 that McFarland purchased and donated to theArizona State Parks Board .External links
* [http://www.go-arizona.com/McFarland-State-Park McFarland State Historic Park]
* [http://www.ssmrocks.com/kimnovak/travel/phoenix/capitol/capitol11.php Arizona State Capitol Monument]
* [http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=M000438 Congress Biography]
* [http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/generic/People_Leaders_McFarland.htm Biography from the Senate]
*Also see McFarland biography by historian James Elton McMillian, Jr., published by Sharlot Hall Museum Press, Prescott, Arizona.
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