Hugh E. Campbell

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Preceded byFred S. Breen
Succeeded byCharles E. Larson
Succeeded byFred S. Breen
Hugh E. Campbell
Campbell, ca. 1914
Member of the Arizona Senate
from the Coconino County district
In office
January 1915  January 1921
Preceded byFred S. Breen
Succeeded byCharles E. Larson
Member of the Arizona Senate
from the Coconino County district
In office
January 1923  July 1923 (his death)
Preceded byCharles E. Larson
Succeeded byFred S. Breen
Personal details
Born(1862-06-10)June 10, 1862
DiedJuly 13, 1923(1923-07-13) (aged 61)
PartyDemocratic
SpouseMadie
ChildrenDanny, Luella, Mary (died age 5)
ProfessionPolitician

Hugh E. Campbell was a politician from Arizona who served in the Arizona state senate for four terms.[1] He was the Arizona Democrat delegate to their national convention in 1896. He was one of the largest sheep ranchers in Arizona, and was prominent in both the National Wool Growers Association and the National Livestock Association. For six years he served on the board of the Arizona State Fair commission, five as its president.

Hugh Campbell was born in rural Nova Scotia, Canada, about 100 miles north of the United States border on June 10, 1862. At the age of 14 he left home, and when he was 18 immigrated to Wisconsin. Three years later, Campbell moved to Arizona in the early 1880s, and initially worked in lumber camps and saw mills, until beginning to raise sheep in 1886.[2][3]

Campbell married Madie Chrisman on November 19, 1893, in Los Angeles. Chrisman was the daughter of Isaac Chrisman, a local Flagstaff hotelier.[4] Their eldest daughter, Martha, died at age 5 on September 14, 1902, of typhoid fever.[5] Her death came less than a week after Mary gave birth to another daughter, Luella, on September 9.[6][7] In addition to the two girls, the Campbells also had a son, named Danny.[3][8] Dan Campbell attended Stanford University, and in April 1917, shortly after the U.S. entered World War I, he enlisted in the navy. He served as a gunner's mate, assigned to merchant vessels sailing to Europe.[8][9] In July 1918, the ship he was stationed on was torpedoed by a German submarine and sunk. There was only a single fatality on the ship, and the rest of the ship's crew was picked up by an American destroyer after approximately 17 hours in lifeboats.[10]

Campbell set a time record for traveling by car from Phoenix to Flagstaff in 1912. He was clocked at 8 hours, 37 minutes and 15 seconds. The time included a 10-minute stop for water at Wickenburg.[11]

In 1923, he was diagnosed with stomach cancer. Following the regular session of the state legislature, he went to Cleveland for surgery,[12] followed by a trip to California for more treatment. These proved ineffective and he died in his summer home in Flagstaff several months later on July 13, 1923.[13][14]

In 1924, the Northern Arizona Normal School, now Northern Arizona University, named one of their women's dormitories after his wife in his honor. During his time in politics he had been a staunch supporter of the school.[15]

Career outside politics

Political career

References

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