Charles Dean Kimball (September 13, 1859 – December 8, 1930) was an American politician and the 47th Governor of Rhode Island.
Early life
Kimball was born in Providence, Rhode Island, on September 13, 1859, as the son of Emery S. Kimball and Mary C. (Briggs) Kimball. He married Gertrude C. Greenalgh November 24, 1885.[1] After school education, he made his career in business.
Political career
Kimball was a member of Rhode Island House of Representatives 1894-99 and Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island 1900-01.[2] He became governor of Rhode Island after the death of incumbent governor William Gregory. He held the governor's office from December 16, 1901, to January 3, 1903. Kimball worked for changes in the State constitution to give the governor veto powers and change state elections from an annual to a biennial basis, both of which were eventually achieved.[3]
During Kimball's term, the beginning of the term of office for the state's general officers was changed from the last Tuesday in May to the first Tuesday in January.
^National Governors Association, Rhode Island Governor Charles Dean Kimball.Archived June 4, 2011, at the Wayback Machine It says in the National Governors Association biography that Kimball was in favour of "changing state elections from a biennial to an annual basis...which [was] eventually achieved", but since the state elections was changed from an annual basis to a biennial basis at this time, the biographer must have made a mistake when writing the text.