John W. King
John William King (October 10, 1916 – August 9, 1996) was an American
lawyer,
jurist, and
Democratic politician from
Manchester, New Hampshire. He received his undergraduate degree from
Harvard College and his law degree from
Columbia Law School in 1943. He practiced law in Manchester and served in the
New Hampshire House of Representatives. In 1962 he was elected governor of New Hampshire, becoming only the third Democratic governor of New Hampshire in 88 years, and the first since
Fred Herbert Brown lost the 1924 election. After his three terms as the 71st
governor of New Hampshire, he served on the
New Hampshire Supreme Court from 1979, and as its
Chief Justice from 1981 until 1986.
As Governor, King instituted the first
state lottery in the nation since 1894. He was a major hawk and a fierce supporter of President
Lyndon B. Johnson during the
Vietnam War and the
1968 presidential election.
During his attacks on Senator
Eugene McCarthy, Johnson's challenger in the New Hampshire primary, King questioned McCarthy's national loyalty and also warned that a strong vote for ''"the appeaser,"'' would be ''"greeted with cheers in
Hanoi."''
King was a
Roman Catholic and after his death in 1996 he was buried in the St. Joseph's Cemetery in
Bedford, New Hampshire.
Provided by Wikipedia