- Robert F. Kennon
Infobox Governor
name=Robert Floyd "Bob" Kennon, Sr.
order=
office1=Governor of Louisiana
birth_date =August 12 ,1902
birth_place =Minden,Webster Parish ,Louisiana , USA
death_date = death date and age|1988|1|11|1902|8|12
term_start =1952
term_end = 1956
predecessor =Earl Kemp Long
successor =Earl Kemp Long
party = Democratic
website =Robert Floyd Kennon, Sr., known as Bob Kennon (
August 12 ,1902 -January 11 ,1988 ), was a "good-government" reform Democraticgovernor of theU.S. state ofLouisiana , who served from 1952-1956. He failed to win a second nonconsecutive term in the 1963 Democratic primary.After the "
Brown v. Board of Education " decision ofMay 17 ,1954 , Governor Kennon ordered the continued enforcement of laws relating to segregation. He vowed that the state would provide apublic school system "which will include segregation in fact." Desegregation, however, began under Kennon's successors,Earl Kemp Long and James Houston "Jimmie" Davis, but it was a long process, not completed in Louisiana untilAugust 1970.The
conservative Kennon grew disillusioned with his national party and endorsed Republican presidential nomineesDwight D. Eisenhower ,Barry M. Goldwater , andGerald R. Ford .Early life and education
Kennon was the fifth child of Floyd Kennon (1871-1966) and the former Annie Laura Bopp. The Kennons operated a
grocery store in Minden, the seat ofWebster Parish . After Floyd Kennon's retirement, the store was managed by sons Francis Edward Kennon, Sr., and Webb Kennon. Young Bob Kennon was an avid Boy Scout (SeeScouting in Louisiana .) who attained the rank of Eagle Scout. He graduated in 1919 from Minden High School, then a comparatively new institution. Thereafter, he attendedLouisiana State University inBaton Rouge , where he procured numerous honors. At the end of his freshman year, he received an award for the best academic record. He wascaptain of his company in Reserve Officers Training Corps and the vice president of the Interfraternity Council. He was on thedebate team and wrote for the campusnewspaper , "The Daily Reveille ". He earned his first letter playing center for the LSUfootball team. He helped to organize the universitytennis team and was one of the first two people to letter in tennis at LSU. He graduated inJune 1923.Kennon graduated from the LSU Law School in
May 1925, and a month later at the age of twenty-two, he passed the bar exam. By the time he was twenty-three, he had successfully challenged MindenMayor Connell Fort and became for a time the youngest mayor in the United States.fact|date=May 2008 Although his term was considered to have been successful, Kennon did not seek reelection. He was also a commander in the National Guard.District attorney and then judge
In 1930, he won the election for
district attorney for the 26th Judicial District, a position that he held for eleven years. He married the former Eugenia SentellDecember 27 ,1908 -May 24 ,2002 ), a graduate ofLouisiana Tech University (then "Louisiana Polytechnic Institute") in Ruston, who taughthome economics . Descended from a prominent Minden family, Mrs. Kennon was a sister of the Mindenphysician Sherburne Sentell. She was a wonderful hostess and was able to cultivate several friendships that would later play key roles in her husband's race for governor. The Kennons had three sons, Robert, Jr. (born 1938), a lawyer, and Charles Sentell "Charlie" Kennon (born 1940, a physician, both in Baton Rouge, and Kenneth Wood "Kenwood" Kennon (born 1943), also a lawyer, who resides inSt. Francisville . Their youngest son, Kenneth, is father to Alex Kennon, an acclaimed actress and writer who attends St. Joseph's Academy of Baton Rouge.During his time as the D.A., he chose not to seek
indictment s for several high profile cases, even though there was sufficient evidence to support criminal prosecution. During this time, he attained the rank oflieutenant colonel in the National Guard, making him one of the highest ranked officers. Active with theMasonic Lodge , Kennon was named "Grand Master" in 1936.Kennon took advantage of his growing circle of influential friends and ran for justice of the state's Second Circuit Court of Appeal in 1940. With 46 percent of the ballots, he nearly won outright in the primary. In the Democratic runoff, his opponent was the
incumbent JudgeHarmon Caldwell Drew , a fellow resident of Minden. He was a powerful opponent, for the Drew family, one of the first to live in Webster Parish, has held judicial positions in north Louisiana for five generations. The race was close, with considerable mudslinging. Kennon won by a margin of nine thousand votes, but he did not carry either his home parish of Webster or neighboringBossier Parish .The seat would not become vacant until 1942. As an active member of the National Guard, Kennon was called to duty in 1941. Although he did not see active combat, Kennon did not return home from
World War II until May 1945. Judge Drew hence served as justice until Kennon returned to claim his seat. Drew died oflung cancer five years later.A quick U.S. Senate campaign, 1948
When U.S. Senator
John H. Overton died in office, aspecial election was called to fill the seat for a two-year term. Kennon's opponent,Russell B. Long , the oldest son of the legendary Huey Pierce Long, Jr., was not quite thirty, still a few days too young to take office at the time of the election. The outcome was close, but Long won, 264,143 (51 percent) to Kennon's 253,668 (49 percent). Long's plurality was hence 10,475 votes. Based on the Senate returns, many in the anti-Long faction began to consider Kennon as a possiblegubernatorial candidate in 1951. Long held the seat without a serious challenge until he announced his retirement, effective January 1987.Running for governor, 1951-1952
Kennon therefore ran for governor in the 1951 Democratic primary. He won his party's nomination over Judge
Carlos Spaht of Baton Rouge, who had the backing of the Long organizers. Kennon polled 482,302 votes (61.4 percent) to Spaht's 302,743 (38.6 percent). Spaht's running-mate for lieutenant governor was a future governor, John Julian McKeithen, then a 33-year-old state representative from Columbia, the seat ofCaldwell Parish , in northeastern Louisiana. McKeithen was defeated for lieutenant governor byC. E. "Cap" Barham (born 1905), a state senator and an attorney from Ruston, the seat ofLincoln Parish .In the low-turnout
general election in the spring of 1952, Kennon trounced Republican Harrison Bagwell, 118,723 (96 percent) to 4,958 (4 percent). Until 1952, Louisiana Republicans had not even offered a token name on gubernatorial general election ballots.In addition to his interest in state sovereignty, Kennon was the governor who worked to provide voting machines to all Louisiana precincts to replace paper ballots still used in some rural parishes. Such machines were designed to eliminate the periodic problem of vote-stealing.
After his governorship, the Kennons continued to reside in Baton Rouge, where Kennon maintained a law practice.
A second gubernatorial campaign, 1963
Kennon's term ended in the spring of 1956, and he was succeeded by his long-time foe, Earl Long. He unsuccessfully attempted to run for governor again in 1963. In the Democratic primary, Kennon ran fourth (127,870 votes or 14.1 percent). He was therefore eliminated from a runoff between Public Service Commissioner John McKeithen of Columbia in
Caldwell Parish and the more liberal contender, former New Orleans Mayor deLesseps Story Morrison, Sr. Some observers theorized that the assassination ofU.S. President John F. Kennedy , which occurred just days before the primary election, may have weakened Kennon's prospects because Kennon had in a televised address criticized policies of both President Kennedy and Attorney GeneralRobert F. Kennedy . He called the Kennedys "young, misguided men." Kennon was also harmed by the presence of the fifth-place candidate, veteran Education SuperintendentShelby M. Jackson , a native ofConcordia Parish in eastern Louisiana, whose votes are believed to have come primarily at the expense of Kennon and therefore worked to deny Kennon the coveted runoff position against Morrison. Jackson was the vocal segregationist among the five candidates, and Kennon discussed "state sovereignty," which some saw as a code word for segregation. Even if half of Jackson's votes had otherwise gone to Kennon, then Kennon, and not McKeithen, would have entered the runoff. Jackson's supporters were also believed in many cases to have been previous backers of the 1959 segregationist gubernatorial hopeful,William M. Rainach ofClaiborne Parish . Another candidate in the race was former State RepresentativeClaude Kirkpatrick fromJefferson Davis Parish , who had headed the Department of Public Works under outgoing Governor Jimmie Davis.McKeithen won the runoff and the ensuing general election. Kennon did not endorse either runoff candidate, but his
nephew ,Edward Kennon , son of F.E. Kennon, Sr., later a Democratic member of theLouisiana Public Service Commission from Minden, and a Shreveport-areadeveloper , stumped for theRoman Catholic and pro-Kennedy Morrison, known by the nickname "Chep", much to the consternation of many of his uncle's conservative andProtestant supporters in north Louisiana. Morrison had endorsed Kennon in the 1951-1952 election cycle, after the elimination of Morrison's first choice, his former law partner, then Congressman Thomas Hale Boggs, Sr., of New Orleans.ee also
*
List of the youngest mayors in the United States
*Youth politics References
* [http://www.cityofwinnfield.com/museum.html City of Winnfield - Political Museum]
* [http://preview.ussearch.com/preview/newsearch;jsessionid=13129B4954339384F43B01CCBEF1A2A6?searchFName=Charles&searchMName=s&searchLName=kennon&searchCity=baton+rouge&searchState=LA&searchApproxAge=67&adID=10002101&searchtab=people&x=56&y=15]
* [http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi]External links
* [http://www.sos.louisiana.gov/tabid/405/Default.aspx State of Louisiana - Biography]
* [http://www.la-cemeteries.com/Governors/Kennon,%20Robert%20F/Kennon,%20Robert%20Floyd.shtml Cemetery Memorial] by La-Cemeteries
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