Rawghlie Clement Stanford (born August 2, 1879 in Buffalo Gap, Taylor County, Texas; died December 15, 1963 in Phoenix, Arizona) succeeded Benjamin Baker Moeur as the fifth Governor of Arizona, serving between January 4, 1937 and January 2, 1939. Following the end of Stanford's term as Governor, Robert Taylor Jones (born February 8, 1884 in Rutledge, Grainger County, Tennessee; died June 11, 1958 in Phoenix, Arizona) became the sixth Governor of Arizona, serving between January 2, 1939 and January 6, 1941.
Dan Edward Garvey (born June 19, 1886 in Vicksburg, Mississippi; died February 5, 1974 in Tucson, Arizona) succeeded Sidney Preston Osborn as the eighth Governor Arizona, serving between May 25, 1948 and January 1, 1951, including the whole of 1949.
John Howard Pyle (born March 25, 1960 in Sheridan, Wyoming; died November 29, 1987 in Tempe, Arizona) succeeded Dan Edward Garvey as the ninth Governor of Arizona, serving between January 1, 1951 and January 3, 1955, including the whole of 1953.
Jack Richard Williams (born October 29, 1909 in Los Angeles, California; died August 24, 1998) succeeded Samuel Pearson Goddard as the thirteenth Governor of Arizona, serving between January 2, 1967 and January 6, 1975, including the whole of 1969.
Nothing - except govern Arizona
The Secretary of State is second in power to Arizona's governor. The current Secretary of State for Arizona is Ken Bennett.
There is no such office in the Arizona Government.
No. He is one of two senators from Arizona.
The Governor.
The state has a governor.
Governor of Arizona.
Richard C. McCormick was appointed to be the 2nd governor of the Territory of Arizona in July of 1866 at the age of 34.
Nobody, actually. Arizona is one of only a handful of US states that does not elect a lieutenant governor, as such an office is not specified in the state's constitution. The first in line to succeed the governor is the Arizona secretary of state.There is no such position in Arizona government.
Frank Farrar was the Governor of South Dakota from January 1969 until January 1971.
Yes.
In States that have that position, it is the Lieutenant Governor.