John Francis Connor

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John Francis Connor
Member of the Arizona Senate
from the Santa Cruz County district
In office
January 1931 – August 1933
Preceded byJ. R. McFarland
Succeeded byPaul C. Keefe
W. E. Patterson
Personal details
Born1903 (1903)
Jerome, Arizona
Died23 August 1961(1961-08-23) (aged 57–58)
Phoenix, Arizona
Political partyDemocratic
ProfessionPolitician

John Francis Connor was an American politician from Arizona. He served a single full term in the

Yavapai County
.

Biography

Connor was born in

Hotel Connor in 1898.[3][4] The hotel was destroyed by fire in 1898,[5][6][7] and then shortly after being rebuilt, was gutted by another fire in 1899, after which it was rebuilt again.[8][9] Connor was left an orphan at the age of fourteen upon the death of his father. His mother had died in 1903. The Connor Hotel was left to John.[4][10] He was an alumnus of the University of Southern California, St. Mary's College, and Georgetown University. He was admitted to the Arizona bar in 1928.[2]

In January 1931, he was appointed to the

Arizona State Senate, to fill the unexpired term of J. R. McFarland, who resigned. At the time of his appointment to the State Senate, he was the youngest practicing attorney in Yavapai County.[2] In 1932 he ran for re-election and won.[11] Later that same year he was appointed by Governor Hunt to one of the three seats on the state's Commission on Uniform State Laws.[12] In August 1933, Connor was appointed the Assistant Attorney General by Arthur T. LaPrade. This forced him to resign from the State Senate.[13][14] Other political posts he occupied included assistant county attorney for Yavapai County and a Maricopa County superior court judge. He died on August 23, 1961, in Good Samaritan Hospital in Phoenix, Arizona.[1]

References