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- Published: 2010-01-05
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Name | James Baxter "Jim" Hunt Jr. |
---|---|
Order | 71st Governor of North Carolina |
Term start | January 9, 1993 |
Term end | January 6, 2001 |
Lieutenant | Dennis A. Wicker |
Predecessor | James G. Martin |
Successor | Mike Easley |
Order2 | 69th Governor of North Carolina |
Term start2 | January 8, 1977 |
Term end2 | January 5, 1985 |
Lieutenant2 | James C. Green |
Predecessor2 | James Holshouser |
Successor2 | James G. Martin |
Order3 | 27th Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina |
Term start3 | January 6, 1973 |
Term end3 | January 8, 1977 |
Governor3 | James Holshouser |
Predecessor3 | Hoyt Patrick Taylor, Jr. |
Successor3 | James C. Green |
Birth date | May 16, 1937 |
Birth place | Wilson, North Carolina |
Party | Democratic |
Spouse | Carolyn Hunt |
Children | 4 |
Profession | Farmer, lawyer, politician |
Education | North Carolina State University University of North Carolina |
Religion | Presbyterian |
He is a graduate of North Carolina State University, with a B.S. in agricultural education and a M.S. in agricultural economics. He also served as Student Body President. In 1964, he received a J.D. from the University of North Carolina School of Law.
Hunt served on the Carnegie Task Force, which created the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards and more recently on the Spellings Commission on the Future of Higher Education.
As Governor Hunt was involved in a variety of efforts to promote technology and technology-based economic development, including the establishment of the North Carolina Biotechnology Center, and the North Carolina School of Science and Math. He was also very successful at recruiting business to his state. Hunt has been criticized for over-spending during the economic boom of the late 1990s, which contributed to severe budget shortfalls in the early 2000s.
Hunt was also criticized for allowing Darryl Hunt (no close relation known) to remain in prison for twenty years after the wrongfully convicted Winston-Salem man was exonerated by exculpatory DNA evidence which pointed to another perpetrator. Darryl Hunt was pardoned by the succeeding Governor, Mike Easley. During his terms in office Hunt oversaw 13 executions (two during his first period in office, 11 during his second), including the first post-Furman execution of a female (Velma Barfield) and the first post-Furman execution in North Carolina (James W. Hutchins).
Governor Hunt chairs the Board of Directors of two institutes which he founded, The James B. Hunt, Jr. Institute for Educational Leadership and Policy at UNC-Chapel Hill, and the Institute for Emerging Issues at N.C. State University in Raleigh. He also serves on the North Carolina Advisory Board of DonorsChoose.
Category:1937 births Category:Governors of North Carolina Category:Lieutenant Governors of North Carolina Category:Living people Category:North Carolina State University alumni Category:People from Wilson, North Carolina
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