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Nevada History: The Real Story As Told By State
Archivist
Who Was the First Governor of the
State of Nevada?
by Guy Rocha, Nevada State Archivist
Many Nevadans believe that Henry Goode Blasdel was the Silver State's
first governor after statehood was granted on October 31, 1864. However,
Blasdel, elected on November 8, did not take office until December 5.
Someone had to be running the 36th state. So, who was Nevada's first chief
executive?
James Warren Nye of New York, commissioned by President Abraham Lincoln
on March 22, 1861 as governor of Nevada Territory, continued as Acting
Governor of Nevada under Article XVII of the newly adopted Nevada State
Constitution. Any government takes time to be organized after its creation
and Nevada's founding fathers described the duties of certain territorial
officers until the swearing in of the elected state officers. Nye spent five
weeks laying the groundwork for the new state.
On October 31, 1864, Nye's first action as the Acting Governor of Nevada
was to certify President Lincoln's proclamation declaring Nevada's
statehood. Lincoln's statehood proclamation and Nye's certification was
published in Nevada's newspapers beginning the following day. The
certification was signed James W. Nye, Governor, and attested to by Orion
Clemens, Secretary of State.
Governor Nye's principal task was to oversee the first state elections on
November 8, which included electing a governor and selecting presidential
electors. There were no steam railroads in Nevada in 1864 and official
election results delivered by stage and other means took time to arrive in
Carson City. The official canvas of the vote was completed on November 26.
Republican Henry G. Blasdel defeated Democrat David E. Buel for governor by
a vote of 9,834 to 6,555. Abraham Lincoln won the presidential race and
three electors were chosen to vote for him at the Electoral College.
However, only two electors voted for Lincoln because one, A. S. Peck, died
after he was selected as an elector. The new state, not yet having a
legislative session, had no law defining how a replacement would be chosen.
Nye continued to make appointments during the interim that included
judgeships, county commissioner positions, and military commissions. He also
issued his final Thanksgiving proclamation on November 14 for Thursday,
November 24, this time as Governor of Nevada. President Lincoln, beginning
in 1863, had designated the last Thursday of November as a national holiday
of Thanksgiving
Governor Nye concluded his tenure in office with a "Valedictory Address"
on inauguration day, Monday, December 5, 1864 in Carson City. His speech was
a lengthy one including an overview of his three and one-half-year tenure as
territorial governor and the profound change he had observed in Nevada. "I
take my leave of you, in official capacity, this day, but in that capacity
alone," Nye concluded. "Among you I intend to live; here I expect to die,"
he vigorously proclaimed. "Governor, I now commit to you and your associates
the interests of this new State, entertaining that no doubt that with your
hands they will be ably defended, and by your vigilant eye carefully watched
and guarded."
Nye then turned the reins of government over to Governor Blasdel.
However, he was not out of office very long. The recently convened state
legislature, among its first items of business, elected James W. Nye as one
of Nevada's first two U. S. Senators on December 15, the other being
attorney and former territorial legislator William M. Stewart. Nye drew the
short term ending on April 4, 1867. The Senator was reelected by the
legislature in 1867 and served until 1873.
In failing health, Nye's intention, which he had shared with Nevadans
upon leaving office as governor in 1864, to die in the state was not
realized. Nevada's only territorial governor and the state's first governor,
died on Christmas Day, 1876, in White Plains, New York. Nevadans did not
forgotten the "Old Grey Eagle," as he was affectionately known. The last
territorial legislature named a county in his honor: Nye County.
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