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Dakota Datebook
November 5, 2003
"William Guy"
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On this date in 1968, William L. Guy became the first
North Dakota governor ever elected to a fourth term. He served 2 two-year
terms and 2 four-year terms between 1961 and 1973.
Governor Guy was a 41 year-old farmer from Amenia when
he was inaugurated. He was born in Devils Lake and has the unusual distinction
of being the first to bring a true two-party system to the state.
In the states earliest years, North Dakota was
governed by Republicans who were aligned with powerful Eastern interests
such as the railroads and grain trade. Republicans continued to dominate
state politics, and those who had radically different notions joined the
Non-Partisan League, a Socialistic party that was nevertheless associated
with Republicans. There was also a vigorous independent party, but few
North Dakotans had really yet espoused the Democratic Party.
At the time, the richest men in the nation completely
dominated the countrys economy, as well as its government. Men like
Rockefeller, Carnegie, James Hill and many others were fabulously wealthy
and wielded their power with little compassion for the little man. When
Republican Teddy Roosevelt ran for president, his campaign attacked corporate
greed and corruption, and demanded better conditions and opportunities
for farmers and working people.
Roosevelts concerns mimicked those of many North
Dakotans. Here, the Republican party still favored the wealthy, and the
political views of those who represented the common man began to shift.
William Guy was one Non-Partisan man who decided the Democratic party
was the answer. Usher Burdick, a long-time Republican senator, had started
shifting as well, and his son, Quentin, ran as a Democrat during the same
time that William Guy and John F. Kennedy ran for office. All three won
their elections, with Quentin Burdick being the first Democrat North Dakota
ever sent to the U.S. Senate.
Under William Guys 12-year watch, state government
was modernized with a new Office of Management and Budget, and the State
Hospital's patient load was reduced from 2,600 to 600 by creating eight
regional mental health districts. He also oversaw the interstate highway
system, the missile projects and the Garrison Diversion project. To better
promote the state, Guy organized the five-state tourist loop known as
the Old West Trail; he also originated the North Dakota Heritage Center
and established the Theodore Roosevelt Rough Rider Award.
On a national scale, Guy organized the first Midwest
Governors' Conference, and was elected chairman of the National Governors'
Conference in 1966. He also helped bring three sugar beet refineries and
large scale, coal-fired, electrical generation to the state. In fact,
it was Governor Guys efforts within the coal industry that ultimately
led to the construction of the nation's first coal-to-synthetic natural
gas conversion plant near Beulah.
And finally, the man who started out as a county agent became an international
presence when President Lyndon Johnson selected him to observe the first
presidential elections in South Vietnam.

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without securing prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
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