Prints and Photographs Collection
Price Daniel

Price Daniel brought an impressive resume to the governorship.
He earned a law degree from Baylor University and became a well-known
defense attorney in Liberty. Elected to the Texas House of Representatives
in 1939, he was an outspoken member of the "Immortal 56,"
a group of legislators opposed to a state sales tax. He was elected
speaker of the House in 1943. Shortly thereafter, he enlisted in the
U.S. Army, where he served as a judge advocate general (JAG) in the
Pacific.
Daniel was discharged from the Army in 1946 and conducted
a whirlwind campaign that same year to become the youngest attorney
general in Texas history. Daniel was highly successful in the job,
handling more than 5000 lawsuits, writing 2000 bills for the Texas
Legislature, and successfully defending more land and money claims
for the state than any previous attorney general. His most famous
cases were his defense of the state's refusal to admit Heman Sweatt,
a black student, to the University of Texas law school; his crusade
against organized gambling; and the defense of Texas' claims to the
Tidelands. With Allan Shivers, Daniel broke with the national Democratic
party over the Tidelands issue, and in 1952 he was elected to the
U.S. Senate as a "Texas Democrat." His first order of business
was to draft the Tidelands bill that was signed into law by President
Eisenhower in 1953. In the Senate, Daniel was best known for a nationwide
narcotics probe that resulted in much stricter regulation drug laws,
and for his near success in passing legislation to reform the electoral
college.
Declaring that he would "rather be Governor of
Texas than President of the United States," Daniel resigned from
the Senate and was elected governor in 1956. He served three terms,
during which he was able to pass major initiatives on highways, prison
reform, water conservation, higher teachers' salaries, and improved
care for the mentally impaired.
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