Bert T. Combs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bert T. Combs | |
50th Governor of Kentucky
|
|
---|---|
In office December 8, 1959 – December 10, 1963 |
|
Lieutenant | Wilson Wyatt |
Preceded by | A. B. "Happy" Chandler |
Succeeded by | Edward T. Breathitt |
|
|
Born | August 13, 1911 Manchester, Kentucky |
Died | December 4, 1991 (aged 80) Powell County, Kentucky |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Mabel Hall Helen Clark Rechtinm Sara Walter |
Profession | Lawyer |
Religion | Baptist |
Bertram Thomas Combs (August 13, 1911 – December 4, 1991), born in Manchester, Clay County, Kentucky, was the Democratic Governor of Kentucky from 1959 through 1963.
Combs attended Cumberland College and the University of Kentucky and graduated from UK's law school in 1937. Shortly thereafter, he was admitted to the bar and began his practice in Manchester, later moving to Prestonsburg.
Combs began his political career with his election to the office of City Attorney in Prestonsburg in 1950, and later became Commonwealth's Attorney. Less than two years later, he was elected to fill a vacancy on the Kentucky Court of Appeals, where he served until 1955. That year, he resigned to run for Governor and was defeated by former Governor A.B. "Happy" Chandler in the Democratic primary. Combs' candidacy and defeat were inextricably intertwined with factionalism in the Kentucky Democratic Party, with Chandler heading one faction and Combs' ally Earle C. Clements heading the other faction. Four years later, Combs was elected Governor. Combs defeated his Democratic primary opponent, the incumbent Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky Harry Lee Waterfield who was an ally of Chandler, and then defeated Republican nominee John M. Robsion, Jr..
During his administration, Bert Combs created a merit system for state government workers that is still in place today. He also formed the state's first Human Rights Commission and also ordered the desegregation of all public accommodations in Kentucky. Combs improved Kentucky's education department and expanded the state's highway system. The Bert T. Combs Mountain Parkway, which covers roughly eighty miles in Eastern Kentucky, was named in honor of the former governor.
Kentucky's Constitution then prohibited Combs from reelection, and in 1967 he was appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit as a Circuit Judge by President Lyndon Johnson. Four years later, he resigned the judgeship to run for Governor again but was defeated in the Democratic primary by Wendell H. Ford, who would later become Kentucky's long-serving member of the United States Senate.
Combs eventually retired from public life but maintained an office in Frankfort. Combs was later recruited by the Council for Better Education to serve as lead attorney in the lawsuit challenging the state's education funding system. The 1989 victory in the state supreme court led to the passage of the 1990 Kentucky Education Reform Act, which is widely viewed as a landmark progressive education bill in a historically conservative state with poor educational funding and outcomes. [From Charles J. Russo and Jane Clark Lindle, "On the cutting edge: Family Resource/Youth Service Centers in Kentucky, Politics of Education Association Yearbook, 1993, pp.178-187]
On the evening of December 3, 1991, Combs was coming home from Lexington when his car was swept from a roadway near Rosslyn, in Powell County into the flooded Red River. The 80-year-old former Governor died of hypothermia as a result. He was buried in Manchester. His widow, Sara Walter Combs, currently sits as chief judge on the Kentucky Court of Appeals. [1]
[edit] References
- Powell, Robert. "Kentucky Governors" 1990.
Preceded by Happy Chandler |
Governor of Kentucky 1959–1963 |
Succeeded by Edward T. Breathitt |
Preceded by Happy Chandler |
Democratic nominee for Governor of Kentucky 1959–1959 |
Succeeded by Edward T. Breathitt |
|