Carroll Gartin

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Preceded bySam Lumpkin
Succeeded byPaul B. Johnson Jr.
Carroll Gartin
Gartin at the inauguration of Paul B. Johnson Jr. in 1964
22nd Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi
In office
January 22, 1952– January 19, 1960
GovernorHugh L. White
Preceded bySam Lumpkin
Succeeded byPaul B. Johnson Jr.
In office
January 21, 1964 – December 19, 1966
GovernorJames P. Coleman
Preceded byPaul B. Johnson Jr.
Succeeded byCharles L. Sullivan
Personal details
BornWilliam Carroll Gartin
(1913-09-14)September 14, 1913
DiedDecember 19, 1966(1966-12-19) (aged 53)
PartyDemocratic
SpouseJanie Gavin
ProfessionAttorney

William Carroll Gartin (September 14, 1913 – December 19, 1966) was an American Democratic politician from Laurel in Jones County in southeastern Mississippi, who served three terms as the 22nd lieutenant governor of his state.

William Carroll Gartin[1] was born on September 14, 1913 in Poplar Springs, Meridian, in eastern Mississippi.[2][3] He was the youngest of six children of Charles Gartin, a furniture salesman, and Geneva Jackson.[3] Carroll was drawn to politics at an early age.[3] He attended the 1924 gubernatorial election rallies in Meridian.[3] Gartin attended the public schools of Meridian.[1] He was a self-proclaimed "pretty ordinary" high school student, neither a varsity athlete nor a class officer, who instead worked in a saw mill after school.[3] He graduated from high school soon after the Great Depression began.[1] His family did not have enough money to pay for college, so Gartin had to work to pay for it himself.[1] He first attended Jones County Junior College, living at his aunt and uncle's dairy farm the first year.[1] He spent the following summer working at a drugstore and then spent his second year there also working as a janitor so he could live in the dormitories.[1] He then similarly worked his way through Millsaps College.[1] In 1933 and 1934 he lived with his parents in Jackson, where he attended Jackson Law School.[1][3] The next year he graduated from the University of Mississippi School of Law.[1][3] In July 1936, Gartin was admitted to the bar and then moved to Laurel, Mississippi.[1][3]

Political career

Personal life

References

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