Warren P. Knowles Explained

Warren P. Knowles
Order:37th
Office:Governor of Wisconsin
Term Start:January 4, 1965
Term End:January 4, 1971
Lieutenant:Patrick Lucey
Jack B. Olson
Predecessor:John W. Reynolds
Successor:Patrick Lucey
Office2:32nd and 34th Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin
Term Start2:January 2, 1961
Term End2:January 7, 1963
Governor2:Gaylord Nelson
Predecessor2:Philleo Nash
Successor2:Jack B. Olson
Term Start3:January 3, 1955
Term End3:January 5, 1959
Governor3:Walter Kohler Jr.
Vernon Thomson
Predecessor3:George M. Smith
Successor3:Philleo Nash
State4:Wisconsin
State Senate4:Wisconsin
District4:10th
Term Start4:January 1, 1941
Term End4:January 3, 1955
Predecessor4:Kenneth S. White
Successor4:Robert P. Knowles
Office5:Member of the St. Croix County
Board of Supervisors
Term Start5:1936
Term End5:1940
Birth Date:August 19, 1908
Birth Place:River Falls, Wisconsin, U.S.
Death Place:Black River Falls, Wisconsin, U.S.
Restingplace:Greenwood Cemetery
St. Croix County, Wisconsin
Relatives:Robert P. Knowles (brother)
Profession:Attorney
Banker
Politician
Party:Republican
Alma Mater:Carleton College
University of Wisconsin Law School
Allegiance: United States
Rank: Lieutenant
Unit:USS Nevada
Battles:World War II

Warren Perley Knowles III (August 19, 1908  - May 1, 1993) was an American lawyer and politician, and was the 37th Governor of Wisconsin. Prior to that, he was the 32nd and 34th Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin, and represented St. Croix, Buffalo, Pepin, and Pierce Counties in the Wisconsin Senate for fourteen years.

Early life

Knowles was born in River Falls, Wisconsin, graduated first from River Falls High School in 1926 and then Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, in 1930, and received a law degree from the University of Wisconsin Law School three years later.

Career

In 1933, Knowles joined the law firm now known as Doar, Drill & Skow S.C. in New Richmond, Wisconsin. From 1935 to 1964, the firm was known as Doar & Knowles. From 1935 to 1940, he served on the St. Croix County Board of Supervisors.

Knowles was first elected to the Wisconsin State Senate in 1940, becoming Majority Leader after only two years in office in 1943, but during World War II he took a break to serve as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy aboard the USS Nevada.[1] Following his military service, Knowles resumed serving in the Wisconsin State Senate and returned to the leadership position for 5 additional legislative terms until his election as lieutenant governor in 1954. Knowles resigned his Senate seat and was succeeded by his brother, Robert, who won an April 1955 special election to finish the unexpired senate term.

Knowles was also a delegate to the Republican National Convention several times.

Knowles would be re-elected to a second term as lieutenant governor in 1956, but was narrowly defeated in 1958 by Democrat Philleo Nash. But Knowles would return and defeat Nash in the 1960 election to reclaim the office for one more term.[1]

During his second term as lieutenant governor, he entered the crowded field for the special election for the remainder of Sen. Joseph McCarthy's term upon his death in 1957. He placed fourth behind former Governor Walter J. Kohler Jr. and Congressmen Glenn R. Davis and Alvin O'Konski, receiving 8% of the vote.[2]

Elected governor narrowly over the Democratic incumbent John W. Reynolds in 1964 against the national Lyndon B. Johnson tidal wave, he served three two-year terms from 1965 to 1971.[3] During these years, he called out the National Guard periodically to maintain civil order during the University of Wisconsin's anti-war and civil rights demonstrations.[4] Under Knowles, the Conservation Department and Department of Resource Development were merged into the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, vocational and higher education and traffic safety were prioritized, and state government was reorganized.[5] [6] Knowles opposed right-to-work legislation.[7]

Knowles's brother, Robert P. Knowles, served as President Pro Tempore of the Wisconsin Senate during his last two terms as governor and during the first four years of Governor Patrick Lucey's administration from 1971 to 1975.

After leaving the governor's chair, Knowles became chairman of Heritage Wisconsin Corporation, a Milwaukee bank holding company.

Personal life

Son of Warren P. and Anna D. Knowles, Knowles was a 1926 graduate of River Falls High School (side note Warren P. Knowles Sr., was an 1897 graduate of RFHS). During his high school days Knowles was a standout athlete both on the football field and basketball court. During his senior year of high school, his team won the 1925 Wisconsin State Football Championship and placed second in the Wisconsin State Basketball Tournament losing to Stevens Point in the lowest scoring championship game in the State's history, 9–7. He was recognized in the River Falls Wildcat Athletic Hall of Fame with a Distinguish Citizen Award.

In 1943 he married Dorothy Guidry, whom he later divorced in 1968.

Knowles died after suffering a heart attack while participating in the Governor's Fishing Opener, an event he helped organize 25 years earlier.[8] [9] His body was donated to the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Honors

Wisconsin's Stewardship Fund, created "to preserve valuable wildlife habitat and natural areas, protect water quality and fisheries, and expand opportunities for outdoor recreation" was renamed the Warren Knowles-Gaylord Nelson Stewardship Program in 1993.[10] In 1994, Knowles was inducted into the Wisconsin Conservation Hall of Fame.[11]

Notes and References

  1. Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau. The State of Wisconsin Blue Book 1970. Madison: 1970, p. 4.
  2. Wisconsin Legislative Reference Library. The Wisconsin Blue Book 1958. Madison: 1958. "Vote for U.S. Senator by Counties: Special Primary Election, July 30, 1957", pp. 666-667.
  3. Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau. The Wisconsin Blue Book 1966. Madison: 1966. "General Election, November 3, 1964: Vote For State Officers by County", p. 749.
  4. Scott W. Jacobs. "Knowles Calls Up National Guard To Subdue Wisconsin Student Riot". The Harvard Crimson, February 13, 1969.
  5. Web site: Gov. Warren P. Knowles.
  6. Web site: Warren P. Knowles.
  7. Web site: John Nichols: Wisconsin Republicans used to know how to distance themselves from a flawed nominee.
  8. http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/dictionary/index.asp?action=view&term_id=2676&keyword=knowles Knowles, Warren P. 1908
  9. Eric Pace, "Warren Knowles, 84, Governor of Wisconsin in Tumultuous 60's", New York Times, May 3, 1993.
  10. Web site: n.d.. ABOUT THE STEWARDSHIP PROGRAM. 28 December 2021. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
  11. Web site: Warren P. Knowles. 2021-12-29. Wisconsin Conservation Hall of Fame. en-US.