Benjamin Baker Moeur
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Benjamin Baker Moeur | |
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4th Governor of Arizona | |
In office January 2, 1933 – January 4, 1937 | |
Preceded by | George W. P. Hunt |
Succeeded by | Rawghlie C. Stanford |
Personal details | |
Born | Decherd, Tennessee | December 22, 1869
Died | March 16, 1937 Tempe, Arizona | (aged 67)
Political party | Democratic |
Profession | Physician |
Benjamin Baker Moeur (December 22, 1869 – March 16, 1937) was the fourth Governor of Arizona, one of the United States of America.
Born in Decherd, Tennessee, Moeur was a doctor before running for public office. He is credited with having delivered most of the babies born in Tempe for 36 years.
His pre-gubernatorial positions included service as the Secretary of the Board of Education for Arizona State Teacher's College (the precursor to Arizona State University) in Tempe.
During Moeur's governorship, he mobilized the Arizona National Guard to stop the construction on Parker Dam, which was being built primarily to divert more water to the Los Angeles area. The mobilization was partly an embarrassment, as the troops arrived via an antiquated steamboat, which became stranded. Its troops were rescued by workers from California working at the dam. Moeur's primary motive, however, was later vindicated by the United States Supreme Court when it ruled that California and the Bureau of Reclamation were constructing Parker Dam illegally because the dam had never been properly authorized. Subsequent legislation rectified this error and construction continued apace.
Moeur left office in 1937 and died 71 days later in Tempe, where he is buried at the Double Butte Cemetery.
In 1939, as a WPA project, Tempe Normal School (later known as Arizona State University) constructed the B. B. Moeur Activity Building on the main Tempe campus. The building was originally the women's activity center, later being remodeled and used as the university's admissions office. The building now houses the Mars Space Flight Facility, a NASA-funded research center directed by Dr. Phil Christensen.
Dr. Moeur has been honored since 1901 by the now Arizona State University via the Moeur Award. The Moeur Award is given to the student or students with the highest academic standing in terms of GPA, and is thus also considered the equivalent to a Valedictorian Award (which is not directly offered by Arizona State).
External links
- Biography at the Tempe Historical Society
- Description of Moeur Building at Arizona State University
- Information on Moeur's historic home, listed on the Tempe Historic Property register