List of Elections in Massachusetts - By Office - Governor

Governor

  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1839
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1946
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1948
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1950
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1952
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1954
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1956
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1958
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1960
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1962
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1964
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1970
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1974 (Dukakis)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1978 (King)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1982 (Dukakis)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1986 (Dukakis)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1990 (Weld)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1994 (Weld)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 1998 (Cellucci)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 2002 (Romney)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 2006 (Patrick)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 2010 (Patrick)
  • Massachusetts gubernatorial election, 2014 (TBD)

Read more about this topic:  List Of Elections In Massachusetts, By Office

Famous quotes containing the word governor:

    It is better to have the power of self-protection than to depend on any man, whether he be the Governor in his chair of State, or the hunted outlaw wandering through the night, hungry and cold and with murder in his heart.
    Lillie Devereux Blake (1835–1913)

    President Lowell of Harvard appealed to students ‘to prepare themselves for such services as the Governor may call upon them to render.’ Dean Greenough organized an ‘emergency committee,’ and Coach Fisher was reported by the press as having declared, ‘To hell with football if men are needed.’
    —For the State of Massachusetts, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    I saw the man my friend ... wants pardoned, Thomas Flinton. He is a bright, good-looking fellow.... Of his innocence all are confident. The governor strikes me as a man seeking popularity, who lacks the independence and manhood to do right at the risk of losing popularity. Afraid of what will be said. He is prejudiced against the Irish and Democrats.
    Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1822–1893)