James C. Nance

James C. Nance

James Clark "Jim" Nance (August 27, 1893 – September 3, 1984) was a leader for 40 years in the Oklahoma Legislature in the U.S. state of Oklahoma and was community newspaper chain publisher 66 years. Nance served as Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives and President pro tempore of the Oklahoma Senate. During his legislative career, Nance wrote the "Honest Mistake" law which became a model for other states. Nance the became a key sponsor and Legislative Chairman of the U.S. Uniform Law Commission (ULC), sponsored by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, a non-partisan advisory panel which drafted uniform acts and uniform state commerce laws. Nance became known as a legislative expert in a 40 year legislative career as one of two Oklahomans to hold the top posts in both chambers of the Oklahoma Legislature. The state's largest newspaper, The Daily Oklahoman called Nance "A Legislator's Legislator." Nance is the only Oklahoma House Speaker elected with a bipartisan coalition of Democrats and Republicans.

Read more about James C. Nance:  Historic Bipartisan Election As House Speaker, Legislative Leadership Roles, U.S. Uniform Law Commissioner, Involvement in U.S. Presidential Elections in 1952 and 1956, Oklahoma Hall of Fame/Oklahoma Heritage Association, Law Background, Political Alliances, Personal Life, Early Life, Legacy, Purcell/Lexington Bridge, Norman Bridge, Nance-Boyer Hall At Cameron University, Jim and Ayleene Nance Park, Oklahoma Journalism Hall of Fame, Native American Service Award From Chickasaw Nation

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