172:. Governor Cooper appointed Carr's wife, Mary Hart Carr, to fill her husband's unexpired term, making her the first woman to serve as a state constitutional officer in Tennessee. After Carr's four-year term ended in January 1945, Mrs. Carr was elected to a new four-year term by the General Assembly. When Joe Carr returned home in the summer of 1945, Mrs. Carr resigned the seat, and Governor
198:'s gubernatorial campaign as an advisor and staff member. In January 1953, following Clement's election as governor, Carr became chief clerk of the Tennessee House of Representatives. Four years later, in January 1957, the General Assembly returned him to the position of Secretary of State. He held the office for the next 20 years, retiring in January 1977.
183:, a former governor who campaigned for the Democratic nomination as an opponent of Crump. After Browning and his allies gained control of the Tennessee state government, Carr, who was allied with Crump, was replaced as Secretary of State in January 1949, when the General Assembly elected James Cummings to the office.
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His service to the party having earned him Crump's support, on
January 8, 1941, the Tennessee General Assembly elected Carr to the position of Secretary of State by a unanimous vote. He was to serve in that office longer than any other Tennessee Secretary of State, serving on three occasions for a
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of
Tennessee, serving as the organization's first secretary. In 1934 he was elected state president of the Young Democrats. In 1940, he was manager for the re-election campaigns of the "Coalition Ticket," three Democratic candidates backed by
119:. He continued to work on the staff of the state legislature in subsequent years, holding positions as assistant bill clerk, assistant chief clerk, and chief clerk of the Tennessee House of Representatives.
238:; the General Assembly, not the secretary of state, was responsible for setting the district boundaries. His responsibility was to publish the resulting map and conduct elections accordingly.
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65:. His father, Sidney Forrest Carr, worked for nine years as a clerk in the Tennessee Secretary of State's office and was a one-term member of the
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and legislative districts had to be of substantially equal populations in order to comply with the "equal protection" provision of the
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total of almost 27 years. His first term in the position ended in May 1944, when he voluntarily enlisted in the
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232:(the so-called "one man one vote" decision). Carr's name on the case as defendant was merely
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in
Nashville on October 12, 1981. He was buried at Woodlawn Memorial Park in Nashville.
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After losing his position in state government, Carr embarked on a short career in the
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Nashville. His first experience in state government was serving as a page in the
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In 1948, incumbent governor Jim Nance McCord lost his bid for renomination to
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261:. He was the first person to be honored in that way during his lifetime.
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came in 1924, when he was an office boy in the campaign headquarters for
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As secretary of state, and thus the official responsible for conducting
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appointed him to take up the job again beginning August 1.
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In 1932, Joe Carr was one of the founding members of the
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Joe Carr, Tennessee
Official In 'One Man, One Vote' Case
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at the direction of the
General Assembly and Governor
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Fourteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution
103:in 1923, when he was 16. His first experience in a
29:(June 20, 1907 – October 12, 1981) was a
155:Commissioner of Railroads and Public Utilities
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194:business in Nashville. In 1952 he joined
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224:, in which the Supreme Court held that
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61:Joseph Carr was born June 20, 1907, in
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91:in 1918, and Joe Carr was educated at
493:Politicians from Nashville, Tennessee
115:. In 1925 he served as a page in the
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117:Tennessee House of Representatives
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503:20th-century American politicians
498:Secretaries of state of Tennessee
483:People from Cookeville, Tennessee
73:from 1919 to 1921. He also was a
445:Secretary of State of Tennessee
420:Secretary of State of Tennessee
393:Secretary of State of Tennessee
324:Joe C. Carr, Secretary of State
309:Joseph Cordell Carr, Sr. Papers
311:, Tennessee Historical Society
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343:Past Constitutional Officers
97:Peabody Demonstration School
46:Tennessee Secretary of State
246:After Carr's retirement, a
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67:Tennessee General Assembly
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253:of him was placed in the
87:The Carr family moved to
27:Joseph Cordell Carr, Sr.
19:Not to be confused with
255:Tennessee State Capitol
202:U.S. Supreme Court case
93:Montgomery Bell Academy
44:who served 20 years as
129:Young Democratic Clubs
101:Tennessee State Senate
63:Cookeville, Tennessee
488:Tennessee Democrats
348:Tennessee Blue Book
329:Tennessee Blue Book
214:in the famous 1962
16:American politician
378:Political offices
368:, October 13, 1981
366:The New York Times
360:Associated Press,
216:U.S. Supreme Court
190:, establishing an
105:political campaign
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452:Succeeded by
430:James H. Cummings
427:Succeeded by
400:Succeeded by
307:David R. Sowell,
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437:Preceded by
410:Preceded by
383:Preceded by
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196:Frank G. Clement
174:Jim Nance McCord
151:Kenneth McKellar
123:Political career
79:U.S. Congressman
75:campaign manager
31:Democratic Party
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264:Carr died from
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181:Gordon Browning
144:Prentice Cooper
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69:, representing
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386:A.B. Broadbent
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188:private sector
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221:Baker v. Carr
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170:World War II
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148:U.S. Senator
140:Edward Crump
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82:Cordell Hull
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478:1981 deaths
473:1907 births
439:Joe C. Carr
259:Ray Blanton
242:Final years
142:: Governor
109:U.S. Senate
21:Joe S. Carr
467:Categories
449:1957–1977
424:1945–1949
397:1941–1944
272:References
235:ex officio
111:candidate
57:Early life
34:politician
351:2009-2010
333:, page 33
331:1975-1978
212:defendant
208:elections
192:insurance
166:U.S. Army
89:Nashville
52:Biography
42:Tennessee
95:and the
168:during
134:Memphis
36:in the
266:cancer
248:bronze
153:, and
218:case
38:state
251:bust
77:for
40:of
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