List of governors of South Carolina
The Governor of the State of South Carolina is the head of state for the state of South Carolina. Under the South Carolina Constitution, the governor is also the head of government, serving as the chief executive of the South Carolina executive branch.
| Governor of South Carolina | |
|---|---|
| Style | His Excellency |
| Residence | South Carolina Governor's Mansion |
| Term length | Four years, renewable once consecutively; afterwards, the officeholder must sit out for one term before being eligible again |
| Inaugural holder | John Rutledge (as State, 1776) William Sayle (as Colony, 1670) |
| Formation | Constitution of South Carolina |
| Salary | $106,078 (2013)[1] |
| Website | www |
The governor is the ex officio commander-in-chief of the National Guard when not called into federal use. The governor's responsibilities include making yearly "State of the State" addresses to the South Carolina General Assembly, submitting an executive budget and ensuring that state laws are enforced.
Henry McMaster is the Governor of South Carolina since January 2017.
The only female governor in South Carolina is Nikki Haley.
This is a list of South Carolina governors.[2]
Colonial period (1670–1775)
Statehood period (1776–present)
Governors under the Articles of Confederation
The General Assembly chose the Governor for a term of two years.
- Parties
| # | Governor | Took Office | Left Office | Lt. Governor | Party | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | John Rutledge | January 9, 1779 | January 31, 1782 | Thomas Bee Christopher Gadsden |
style="background:Template:United States political party color" |No party | 2nd time | |
| 4 | John Mathews | January 31, 1782 | February 4, 1783 | Richard Hutson | style="background:Template:United States political party color" |No party | ||
| 5 | Benjamin Guerard | February 4, 1783 | February 11, 1785 | Richard Beresford William Moultrie William Moultrie |
style="background:Template:United States political party color" |No party | ||
| 6 | William Moultrie | February 11, 1785 | February 20, 1787 | Charles Drayton | style="background:Template:United States political party color" |No party | 1st time | |
| 7 | Thomas Pinckney | February 20, 1787 | January 26, 1789 | Thomas Gadsden | Federalist | ||
| 8 | Charles Pinckney | January 26, 1789 | December 5, 1792 | Alexander Gillon | 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 | Lt. Governor | Party | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 | William Moultrie | December 5, 1792 | December 17, 1794 | James Ladson | Federalist | 2nd time | |
| 10 | Arnoldus Vanderhorst | December 17, 1794 | December 8, 1796 | Lewis Morris | Federalist | ||
| 11 | Charles Pinckney | December 8, 1796 | December 18, 1798 | Robert Anderson | Democratic-Republican | 2nd time | |
| 12 | Edward Rutledge | December 18, 1798 | January 23, 1800 | John Drayton | Federalist | Died in office | |
| 13 | John Drayton | January 23, 1800 | December 8, 1802 | Richard Winn | Democratic-Republican | 1st time | |
| 14 | James Burchill Richardson | December 8, 1802 | December 7, 1804 | Ezekiel Pickens | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 15 | Paul Hamilton | December 7, 1804 | December 9, 1806 | Thomas Sumter, Jr. | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 16 | Charles Pinckney | December 9, 1806 | December 10, 1808 | John Hopkins | Democratic-Republican | 3rd time | |
| 17 | John Drayton | December 10, 1808 | December 8, 1810 | Frederick Nance | Democratic-Republican | 2nd time | |
| 18 | Henry Middleton | December 8, 1810 | December 10, 1812 | Samuel Farrow | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 19 | Joseph Alston | December 10, 1812 | December 10, 1814 | Eldred Simkins | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 20 | David Rogerson Williams | December 10, 1814 | December 5, 1816 | Robert Creswell | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 21 | Andrew Pickens | December 5, 1816 | December 8, 1818 | John A. Cuthbert | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 22 | John Geddes | December 8, 1818 | December 7, 1820 | William Youngblood | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 23 | Thomas Bennett, Jr. | December 7, 1820 | December 7, 1822 | William Pinckney | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 24 | John Lyde Wilson | December 7, 1822 | December 3, 1824 | Henry Bradley | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 25 | Richard Irvine Manning I | December 3, 1824 | December 9, 1826 | William Bull | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 26 | John Taylor | December 9, 1826 | December 10, 1828 | James Witherspoon | Democratic-Republican | ||
| 27 | Stephen Decatur Miller | December 10, 1828 | December 9, 1830 | Thomas Williams | Democratic (Nullifier) | ||
| 28 | James Hamilton, Jr. | December 9, 1830 | December 10, 1832 | Patrick Noble | Democratic (Nullifier) | ||
| 29 | Robert Young Hayne | December 10, 1832 | December 9, 1834 | Charles Cotesworth Pinckney | Democratic (Nullifier) | ||
| 30 | George McDuffie | December 9, 1834 | December 10, 1836 | Whitemarsh B. Seabrook | Democratic | ||
| 31 | Pierce Mason Butler | December 10, 1836 | December 7, 1838 | William DuBose | Democratic | ||
| 32 | Patrick Noble | December 7, 1838 | April 7, 1840 | Barnabas Kelet Henagan | Democratic | Died in office | |
| 33 | Barnabas Kelet Henagan | April 7, 1840 | December 9, 1840 | vacant | Democratic | Not elected | |
| 34 | John Peter Richardson II | December 9, 1840 | December 8, 1842 | William K. Clowney | Democratic | ||
| 35 | James Henry Hammond | December 8, 1842 | December 7, 1844 | Isaac D. Witherspoon | Democratic | ||
| 36 | William Aiken, Jr. | December 7, 1844 | December 8, 1846 | J.F. Ervin | Democratic | ||
| 37 | David Johnson | December 8, 1846 | December 12, 1848 | William Cain | Democratic | ||
| 38 | Whitemarsh B. Seabrook | December 12, 1848 | December 13, 1850 | William Henry Gist | Democratic | ||
| 39 | John Hugh Means | December 13, 1850 | December 9, 1852 | Joshua John Ward | Democratic | ||
| 40 | John Lawrence Manning | December 9, 1852 | December 11, 1854 | James Irby | Democratic | ||
| 41 | James Hopkins Adams | December 11, 1854 | December 9, 1856 | Richard de Treville | Democratic | ||
| 42 | Robert F.W. Allston | December 9, 1856 | December 10, 1858 | Gabriel Cannon | Democratic | ||
| 43 | William Henry Gist | December 10, 1858 | December 14, 1860 | M. E. Carn | Democratic | ||
| 44 | Francis Wilkinson Pickens | December 14, 1860 | December 17, 1862 | W.W. Harllee | Democratic | ||
| 45 | Milledge Luke Bonham | December 17, 1862 | December 18, 1864 | Plowden Weston | Democratic | ||
| 46 | Andrew Gordon Magrath | December 18, 1864 | May 25, 1865 | Robert McCaw | Democratic | Deposed by the Union Army | |
| 47 | Benjamin Franklin Perry | June 30, 1865 | November 29, 1865 | vacant | 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 | Lt. Governor | Party | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 49 | 100px | James Lawrence Orr | November 29, 1865 | July 6, 1868 | W.D. Porter | style="background:Template:United States political party color" |No party (Democratic) | 1st popularly elected Governor |
Governors under the Constitution of 1868
- Parties
| # | Governor | Took Office | Left Office | Lt. Governor | Party | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 | 100px | Robert Kingston Scott | July 6, 1868 | December 7, 1872 | Lemuel Boozer Alonzo J. Ransier |
Republican | |
| 51 | 100px | Franklin J. Moses, Jr. | December 7, 1872 | December 1, 1874 | Richard Howell Gleaves | Republican | |
| 52 | 100px | Daniel Henry Chamberlain | December 1, 1874 | December 14, 1876 | Richard Howell Gleaves | Republican | Claimed Governorship after 1876 election |
| 53 | 100px | Wade Hampton III | December 14, 1876 | February 26, 1879 | William Dunlap Simpson | Democratic | Resigned |
| 54 | 100px | William Dunlap Simpson | February 26, 1879 | September 1, 1880 | John D. Kennedy | Democratic | Not elected |
| 55 | 100px | Thomas Bothwell Jeter | September 1, 1880 | November 30, 1880 | vacant | Democratic | |
| 56 | 100px | Johnson Hagood | November 30, 1880 | December 1, 1882 | John D. Kennedy | Democratic | |
| 57 | 100px | Hugh Smith Thompson | December 1, 1882 | July 10, 1886 | John Calhoun Sheppard | Democratic | Resigned |
| 58 | File:John Calhoun Sheppard.jpg | John Calhoun Sheppard | July 10, 1886 | November 30, 1886 | vacant | Democratic | Not elected |
| 59 | 100px | John Peter Richardson III | November 30, 1886 | December 4, 1890 | William Mauldin | Democratic | |
| 60 | File:Tillman crop.jpg | Benjamin Ryan Tillman | December 4, 1890 | December 4, 1894 | Eugene Gary W.H. Timmerman |
Democratic | |
| 61 | 100px | John Gary Evans | December 4, 1894 | January 18, 1897 | W.H. Timmerman | Democratic | |
Governors under the Constitution of 1895
- Parties
Democratic (27) Republican (6)
| Number of Governors by Party | |
|---|---|
| Colonial Governors | 30 |
| style="background:Template:United States political party color" |No party | 6 |
| Federalist | 4 |
| Democratic-Republican | 13 |
| Democratic | 55 |
| Republican | 9 |
Other high offices held
This is a table of congressional seats, other federal offices, other governorships, and other high offices 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 January 2017[update], there are six 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 (served 1959–1963, born 1922). The most recent U.S. governor of South Carolina to die was James Burrows Edwards (served 1975–1979, born 1927), on December 26, 2014.[4] The most recently serving governor to die was Carroll A. Campbell, Jr. (served 1987–1995, born 1940) on December 7, 2005.
| Governor | Party | Gubernatorial term | Birth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ernest "Fritz" Hollings | Democratic | 1959–1963 |
January 1, 1922 (aged 104) |
| Richard Riley | Democratic | 1979–1987 |
January 2, 1933 (aged 93) |
| David Beasley | Republican | 1995–1999 |
February 26, 1957 (aged 68) |
| Jim Hodges | Democratic | 1999–2003 |
November 19, 1956 (aged 69) |
| Mark Sanford | Republican | 2003–2011 |
May 28, 1960 (aged 65) |
| Nikki Haley | Republican | 2011–2017 |
List Of Governors Of South Carolina MediaJanuary 20, 1972 (aged 53) |
Related pages
References
- ↑ "CSG Releases 2013 Governor Salaries". The Council of State Governments. June 25, 2013. Archived from the original on October 22, 2014. Retrieved November 23, 2014.
- ↑ "South Carolina Governors". SCIWAY. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ↑ "Executive Director". Archived from the original on 2017-05-01. Retrieved 2018-08-01.
- ↑ "Former Gov. James Edwards dies at 87". wistv.com. WCSC and WIS. Retrieved March 7, 2015.