Pardon - Governor Miller

 
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Pardon - Governor Miller
Pardon - Governor Miller
Pardon - Governor Miller
Pardon - Governor Miller

Pardon - Governor Miller

Object number2015.029.20
DateJune 14, 1880
Associated LocationLittle Rock, Arkansas
MediumPaper, Ink
Dimensions13 3/4 × 16 5/8 in. (35 × 42.2 cm)
Credit LineOld State House Museum Collection
Terms
    DescriptionA pardon absolving Thomas Johnson of the crime of selling whiskey without a license. The pardon is signed by Governor William Miller and Secretary of State Jacob Frolich. Miller served as governor from 1877-1881; Frolich served as secretary of state from 1879-1885.

    Jacob Frolich was a German immigrant and a Confederate soldier who became an active and high-profile figure in post–Civil War Arkansas politics. An alleged leader of the Ku Klux Klan in Arkansas, he was accused of murder in a case that highlighted the political divisions in the state at that time. In the end, Frolich was acquitted of the charges. In 1874, he was elected assistant secretary of the Arkansas Senate, and he became chief secretary of the Senate in 1877. The following year, he was elected Arkansas’s secretary of state and went on to be elected to three two-year terms, he held the post from 1879 to 1885. As secretary of state, Frolich paid particular attention to the care of the State House, urging the legislature to provide adequate funding for needed repairs and annual upkeep. After completing his terms as secretary of state, Frolich went to Washington DC, where he became chief clerk of the Mineral Division of the Department of the Interior under President Grover Cleveland. After President Cleveland left the office, he returned to Little Rock and soon after announced his candidacy for the office of state treasurer. However, on April 25, 1890, Frolich died at his home following a surgical procedure.
    William Read Miller was born on November 23, 1823 in Batesville, Arkansas to John and Clara Moore Miller. In 1848 Miller was elected Independence County Clerk and held office until 1854. He married Susan Elizabeth Bevens on January 27, 1849. In 1854, Miller was appointed state auditor by Governor Elias Nelson Conway. He was then named as one of the accountants reporting on the Real Estate Bank by Governor Conway. Miller returned to the auditor’s office in 1856 and remained there until the conclusion of the Civil War. After the conclusion of the Civil War, Miller surrendered the auditor’s books to the Union –controlled Little Rock auditor James R. Berry under Governor Isaac Murphy. Miller was reelected to the auditor’s office in 1866, but the 1868 Reconstruction halted his career. Miller went on to be elected the twelfth governor of Arkansas in 1877 and served until 1881. Miller emphasized economic growth with friendly relations between whites and African American as a way to stimulate further growth. Miller’s social standing put him at odds with other politicians of the times. He also supported the public school system as well as the state schools for the blind and deaf. Miller went on to serve as deputy state treasurer from 1881 to 1882, and was elected state auditor again in 1886. He joined the Odd Fellows fraternal group in 1850 and became a Freemason in 1859. Miller was the first Arkansas governor to receive an honorary degree from the Arkansas Industrial University (today the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville) in 1880. Miller died on November 29, 1887.
    Status
    Not on view