List of Governors of South Carolina
Governor of South Carolina | |
---|---|
Style | Her Excellency |
Term length | Four years, renewable once |
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This is a list of South Carolina governors. The current governor of South Carolina is Nikki Haley; she has been in office since 12 January 2011.
Contents
Colonial period (1670–1775)
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Statehood period (1776 to present)
Presidents under the Articles of Confederation
The General Assembly chose the President for a term of two years.
- Parties
# | Governor | Took Office | Left Office | Party | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
31 | John Rutledge | March 26, 1776 | March 5, 1778 | No party | 1st time, Resigned |
32 | Rawlins Lowndes | March 6, 1778 | January 9, 1779 | No party | British prisoner during Revolutionary War |
Governors under the Articles of Confederation
The General Assembly chose the Governor for a term of two years.
- Parties
# | Governor | Took office | Left office | Party | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
John Rutledge | January 9, 1779 | January 31, 1782 | No party | 2nd time | |
33 | John Mathews | January 31, 1782 | February 4, 1783 | No party | |
34 | Benjamin Guerard | February 4, 1783 | February 11, 1785 | No party | |
35 | William Moultrie | February 11, 1785 | February 20, 1787 | No party | 1st time |
36 | Thomas Pinckney | February 20, 1787 | January 26, 1789 | Federalist | |
37 | Charles Pinckney | January 26, 1789 | December 5, 1792 | Federalist | 1st time |
Governors under the Constitution of 1790
The General Assembly chose the Governor for a term of two years.
- Parties
Democratic Federalist Democratic-Republican
# | Governor | Took office | Left office | Party | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
William Moultrie | December 5, 1792 | December 17, 1794 | Federalist | 2nd time | |
38 | Arnoldus Vanderhorst | December 17, 1794 | December 8, 1796 | Federalist | |
Charles Pinckney | December 8, 1796 | December 18, 1798 | Democratic-Republican | 2nd time | |
39 | Edward Rutledge | December 18, 1798 | January 23, 1800 | Federalist | Died in office |
40 | John Drayton | January 23, 1800 | December 8, 1802 | Democratic-Republican | 1st time |
41 | James Burchill Richardson | December 8, 1802 | December 7, 1804 | Democratic-Republican | |
42 | Paul Hamilton | December 7, 1804 | December 9, 1806 | Democratic-Republican | |
Charles Pinckney | December 9, 1806 | December 10, 1808 | Democratic-Republican | 3rd time | |
John Drayton | December 10, 1808 | December 8, 1810 | Democratic-Republican | 2nd time | |
43 | Henry Middleton | December 8, 1810 | December 10, 1812 | Democratic-Republican | |
44 | Joseph Alston | December 10, 1812 | December 10, 1814 | Democratic-Republican | |
45 | David Rogerson Williams | December 10, 1814 | December 5, 1816 | Democratic-Republican | |
46 | Andrew Pickens | December 5, 1816 | December 8, 1818 | Democratic-Republican | |
47 | John Geddes | December 8, 1818 | December 7, 1820 | Democratic-Republican | |
48 | Thomas Bennett, Jr. | December 7, 1820 | December 7, 1822 | Democratic-Republican | |
49 | John Lyde Wilson | December 7, 1822 | December 3, 1824 | Democratic-Republican | |
50 | Richard Irvine Manning I | December 3, 1824 | December 9, 1826 | Democratic-Republican | |
51 | John Taylor | December 9, 1826 | December 10, 1828 | Democratic-Republican | |
52 | Stephen Decatur Miller | December 10, 1828 | December 9, 1830 | Democratic (Nullifier) | |
53 | James Hamilton, Jr. | December 9, 1830 | December 10, 1832 | Democratic (Nullifier) | |
54 | Robert Young Hayne | December 10, 1832 | December 9, 1834 | Democratic (Nullifier) | |
55 | George McDuffie | December 9, 1834 | December 10, 1836 | Democratic | |
56 | Pierce Mason Butler | December 10, 1836 | December 7, 1838 | Democratic | |
57 | Patrick Noble | December 7, 1838 | April 7, 1840 | Democratic | Died in office |
58 | Barnabas Kelet Henagan | April 7, 1840 | December 9, 1840 | Democratic | Not elected |
59 | John Peter Richardson II | December 9, 1840 | December 8, 1842 | Democratic | |
60 | James Henry Hammond | December 8, 1842 | December 7, 1844 | Democratic | |
61 | William Aiken, Jr. | December 7, 1844 | December 8, 1846 | Democratic | |
62 | David Johnson | December 8, 1846 | December 12, 1848 | Democratic | |
63 | Whitemarsh B. Seabrook | December 12, 1848 | December 13, 1850 | Democratic | |
64 | John Hugh Means | December 13, 1850 | December 9, 1852 | Democratic | |
65 | John Lawrence Manning | December 9, 1852 | December 11, 1854 | Democratic | |
66 | James Hopkins Adams | December 11, 1854 | December 9, 1856 | Democratic | |
67 | Robert F.W. Allston | December 9, 1856 | December 10, 1858 | Democratic | |
68 | William Henry Gist | December 10, 1858 | December 14, 1860 | Democratic | |
69 | Francis Wilkinson Pickens | December 14, 1860 | December 17, 1862 | Democratic | |
70 | Milledge Luke Bonham | December 17, 1862 | December 18, 1864 | Democratic | |
71 | Andrew Gordon Magrath | December 18, 1864 | May 25, 1865 | Democratic | Deposed by the Union Army |
72 | Benjamin Franklin Perry | June 30, 1865 | November 29, 1865 | Unionist Democrat | Appointed by President Andrew Johnson |
Governors under the Constitution of 1865
First Constitution of South Carolina to provide for the direct election of the Governor.
- Parties
# | Governor | Took Office | Left Office | Party | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
73 | James Lawrence Orr | November 29, 1865 | July 6, 1868 | No party (Democratic) | 1st popularly elected Governor |
Governors under the Constitution of 1868
- Parties
# | Governor | Took Office | Left Office | Party | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
74 | Robert Kingston Scott | July 6, 1868 | December 7, 1872 | Republican | |
75 | Franklin I. Moses, Jr. | December 7, 1872 | December 1, 1874 | Republican | |
76 | Daniel Henry Chamberlain | December 1, 1874 | December 14, 1876 | Republican | Claimed Governorship after 1876 election |
77 | Wade Hampton III | December 14, 1876 | February 26, 1879 | Democratic | Resigned |
78 | William Dunlap Simpson | February 26, 1879 | September 1, 1880 | Democratic | Not elected |
79 | Thomas Bothwell Jeter | September 1, 1880 | November 30, 1880 | Democratic | |
80 | Johnson Hagood | November 30, 1880 | December 1, 1882 | Democratic | |
81 | Hugh Smith Thompson | December 1, 1882 | July 10, 1886 | Democratic | Resigned |
82 | John Calhoun Sheppard | July 10, 1886 | November 30, 1886 | Democratic | Not elected |
83 | John Peter Richardson III | November 30, 1886 | December 4, 1890 | Democratic | |
84 | Benjamin Ryan Tillman | December 4, 1890 | December 4, 1894 | Democratic | |
85 | John Gary Evans | December 4, 1894 | January 18, 1897 | Democratic |
Governors under the Constitution of 1895
- Parties
# | Governor | Took Office | Left Office | Party | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
86 | William Haselden Ellerbe | January 18, 1897 | June 2, 1899 | Democratic | Died in office |
87 | Miles Benjamin McSweeney | June 2, 1899 | January 20, 1903 | Democratic | |
88 | Duncan Clinch Heyward | January 20, 1903 | January 15, 1907 | Democratic | |
89 | Martin Frederick Ansel | January 15, 1907 | January 17, 1911 | Democratic | |
90 | Coleman Livingston Blease | January 17, 1911 | January 14, 1915 | Democratic | Resigned |
91 | Charles Aurelius Smith | January 14, 1915 | January 19, 1915 | Democratic | Not elected |
92 | Richard Irvine Manning III | January 19, 1915 | January 21, 1919 | Democratic | |
93 | Robert Archer Cooper | January 21, 1919 | May 20, 1922 | Democratic | Resigned |
94 | Wilson Godfrey Harvey | May 20, 1922 | January 16, 1923 | Democratic | Not elected |
95 | Thomas Gordon McLeod | January 16, 1923 | January 18, 1927 | Democratic | |
96 | John Gardiner Richards, Jr. | January 18, 1927 | January 20, 1931 | Democratic | 1st to be elected to a four-year term |
97 | Ibra Charles Blackwood | January 20, 1931 | January 15, 1935 | Democratic | |
98 | Olin D. Johnston | January 15, 1935 | January 17, 1939 | Democratic | 1st time |
99 | Burnet R. Maybank | January 17, 1939 | November 4, 1941 | Democratic | Resigned |
100 | Joseph Emile Harley | November 4, 1941 | February 27, 1942 | Democratic | Not elected, Died in office |
101 | Richard Manning Jefferies | February 27, 1942 | January 19, 1943 | Democratic | Not elected |
Olin D. Johnston | January 19, 1943 | January 2, 1945 | Democratic | 2nd time, Resigned | |
102 | Ransome Judson Williams | January 2, 1945 | January 21, 1947 | Democratic | Not elected |
103 | Strom Thurmond | January 21, 1947 | January 16, 1951 | Democratic | |
104 | James Francis Byrnes | January 16, 1951 | January 18, 1955 | Democratic | |
105 | George Bell Timmerman, Jr. | January 18, 1955 | January 20, 1959 | Democratic | |
106 | Ernest "Fritz" Hollings | January 20, 1959 | January 15, 1963 | Democratic | |
107 | Donald Stuart Russell | January 15, 1963 | April 22, 1965 | Democratic | Resigned |
108 | Robert Evander McNair | April 22, 1965 | January 19, 1971 | Democratic | |
109 | John C. West | January 19, 1971 | January 21, 1975 | Democratic | |
110 | James Burrows Edwards | January 21, 1975 | January 10, 1979 | Republican | |
111 | Richard Wilson Riley | January 10, 1979 | January 14, 1987 | Democratic | 1st elected to two consecutive four-year terms |
112 | Carroll A. Campbell, Jr. | January 14, 1987 | January 11, 1995 | Republican | |
113 | David Muldrow Beasley | January 11, 1995 | January 13, 1999 | Republican | |
114 | James Hovis Hodges | January 13, 1999 | January 15, 2003 | Democratic | |
115 | Mark Sanford | January 15, 2003 | January 12, 2011 | Republican | |
116 | Nikki Haley | January 12, 2011 | Present | Republican | 1st female and Indian American Governor |
Other high offices held
This is a table of congressional seats, other federal offices, and other governorships held by governors. All representatives and senators mentioned represented South Carolina except where noted. * denotes those offices which the governor resigned to take.
Living former U.S. governors of South Carolina
As of May 2015[update], there are five former U.S. governors of South Carolina who are currently living at this time, the oldest U.S. governor of South Carolina being Ernest "Fritz" Hollings (1959–1963, born 1922). The most recent U.S. governor of South Carolina to die was James Burrows Edwards (1975–1979), on December 26, 2014.[1] The most recently serving governor to die was Carroll A. Campbell, Jr. (1987-1995) on December 7, 2005.
Governor | Gubernatorial term | Date of birth (and age) |
---|---|---|
Ernest "Fritz" Hollings | 1959–1963 | January 1, 1922 |
Richard Wilson Riley | 1979–1987 | January 2, 1933 |
David Muldrow Beasley | 1995–1999 | February 26, 1957 |
James Hovis Hodges | 1999–2003 | November 19, 1956 |
Mark Sanford | 2003–2011 | May 28, 1960 |
See also
- Governor of South Carolina
- South Carolina gubernatorial elections
- List of Lieutenant Governors of South Carolina
- List of United States Senators from South Carolina
- List of United States Representatives from South Carolina
- Timeline of South Carolina
References
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