George N. Craig Politician

George North Craig (August 6, 1909 – December 17, 1992) was the 39th Governor of the U.S. state of Indiana from 1953 until 1957. A lawyer and veteran of World War II who was promoted to serve in a division command staff, Craig first gained popularity in the state as national commander of the American Legion. He was a political outsider when he ran for governor and was at odds with more conservative party leadership during his time in office. Although he made significant reforms, his term ended with a high profile bribery scandal when it was found that several high level state employees had been accepting bribes to influence their decision in assigning construction contracts. Craig was personally uninvolved in the scandal but was held responsible for it by the public, ending his political career.At odds with party leaders, and angered by the bribery scandal, he left the state after his term and moved to Virginia where he opened a law office and later became president of an automotive company. After a decade he returned to Indiana where he retired from public life, but resumed activity in the Republican Party as a political adviser until his death in 1992.

Personal facts

Birth dateAugust 06, 1909
Birth place
Brazil Indiana
Religion
Methodism
Date of deathDecember 17, 1992
Place of death
Brazil Indiana
Profession
Lawyer , Politician , Soldier

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Politician

military operations
Bronze Star Medal
Oak leaf cluster
World War II
18th Division (United States)
military branch
United States Army
military rank
Lieutenant colonel
party
Republican Party (United States)
service start1941
service end1946
successor

George N. Craig on Wikipedia