Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania - Lieutenant Governors of Pennsylvania

Lieutenant Governors of Pennsylvania

  1. John Latta (Democrat) 1875-79
  2. Charles Warren Stone (Republican) 1879-83
  3. Chauncey Forward Black (Democrat) 1883-87
  4. William T. Davies (Republican) 1887-91
  5. Louis Arthur Watres (Republican) 1891-95
  6. Walter Lyon (Republican) 1895-99
  7. John P. S. Gobin (Republican) 1899-1903
  8. William M. Brown (Republican) 1903-07
  9. Robert S. Murphy (Republican) 1907-11
  10. John M. Reynolds (Republican) 1911-15
  11. Frank B. McClain (Republican) 1915-19
  12. Edward E. Beidleman (Republican) 1919-23
  13. David J. Davis (Republican) 1923-27
  14. Arthur H. James (Republican) 1927-31
  15. Edward C. Shannon (Republican) 1931-35
  16. Thomas Kennedy (Democrat) 1935-39
  17. Samuel S. Lewis (Republican) 1939-43
  18. John Cromwell Bell, Jr. (Republican) 1943-47
  19. Daniel B. Strickler (Republican) 1947-51
  20. Lloyd H. Wood (Republican) 1951-55
  21. Roy E. Furman (Democrat) 1955-59
  22. John Morgan Davis (Democrat) 1959-63
  23. Raymond P. Shafer (Republican) 1963-67
  24. Raymond J. Broderick (Republican) 1967-71
  25. Ernest P. Kline (Democrat) 1971-1979
  26. William Scranton, III (Republican) 1979-1987
  27. Mark Singel (Democrat) 1987-1995
  28. Mark S. Schweiker (Republican) 1995-2001
  29. Robert C. Jubelirer (Republican) 2001-2003
  30. Catherine Baker Knoll (Democrat) 2003-2008
  31. Joseph B. Scarnati III (Republican) 2008-2011
  32. Jim Cawley (Republican) 2011–present

Read more about this topic:  Lieutenant Governor Of Pennsylvania

Famous quotes containing the words governors and/or pennsylvania:

    I do love this people [the French] with all my heart, and think that with a better religion and a better form of government and their present governors their condition and country would be most enviable.
    Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826)

    The Republican Party does not perceive how many his failure will make to vote more correctly than they would have them. They have counted the votes of Pennsylvania & Co., but they have not correctly counted Captain Brown’s vote. He has taken the wind out of their sails,—the little wind they had,—and they may as well lie to and repair.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)