Gov. Daniel J. Moody -- Texas State Cemetery, Austin TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 30° 15.911 W 097° 43.634
14R E 622432 N 3348855
The grave of former Texas Governor Dan Moody and his wife Mildred, at the Texas State Cemetery in Austin TX. Gov. Moody served two terms as Governor, from 1927-1931.
Waymark Code: WMQ02W
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 11/20/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member NW_history_buff
Views: 1

Former Governor Dan Moody and his wife Mildred are buried in the Texas State Cemetery's Republic Hill Section, in Row M, space 12.

His tombstone reads as follows:

"Dan Moody
Born Taylor, Texas-June 1, 1893
Died Austin, Texas-May 22, 1966

"Whose integrity and dedication created
lasting standards for conduct in office
and in his beloved profession, the Law"

Governor of Texas
1927-1931

Attorney General of Texas
1925-1927

District Attorney
Travis and Williamson Counties
1923-1925

"This above all; to thine own self be true:
And it must follow, as the night the day.
Thou canst not then be false to any man."

-Shakespeare"

From the Texas State Cemetery website: (visit link)

"Full Name: Daniel J. Moody
AKA: Dan
Location: Section:Republic Hill, Section 1 (C1)
Row:M Number:12
Reason for Eligibility: District Attorney, Twenty-sixth Judicial District; Attorney General of Texas; Governor of Texas
Birth Date: June 1, 1893
Died: May 22, 1966
Buried: May 24, 1966

MOODY, DANIEL JAMES, JR. (1893-1966). Dan Moody, governor of Texas, was born at Taylor, Texas, on June 1, 1893, the son of Daniel James and Nannie Elizabeth (Robertson) Moody. He graduated from Taylor High School and attended the University of Texas from 1910 to 1914, taking law courses during the last two years. He was admitted to the bar in 1914 and began practice in Taylor with Harris Melasky. His early career was interrupted by service in World War I, during which he served as second lieutenant and captain in the Texas National Guard and second lieutenant in the United States Army. He returned to his practice after the war and in 1920 entered upon a period of public service. He was the youngest elected to several successive public offices: county attorney of Williamson County, 1920-22; district attorney of the Twenty-sixth Judicial District, 1922-25; attorney general of Texas, 1925-27; and governor of Texas, elected for two terms, 1927-31.

During his term as district attorney of the Twenty-sixth Judicial District, which included Williamson and Travis counties, at the peak of Ku Klux Klan agitation, he prosecuted a group for criminal activities allegedly connected with the Klan and sent some of them to prison. He achieved statewide recognition for these prosecutions and, despite Klan opposition, was elected attorney general at the start of the first administration of Governor Miriam A. Ferguson. State highway-contract scandals developed within a few months, and the attorney general prosecuted cases to set aside "unconscionable" highway contracts. After these cases were won, he became the likely candidate to oppose Mrs. Ferguson when she sought a second term. The campaign has been characterized as one of the most spectacular in Texas history. Moody's platform supported prohibition, woman suffrage, and other anti-Ferguson positions. After winning the first 1926 primary with 49.9 percent of the vote, Moody defeated Ferguson 495,723 to 270,595 in a runoff. He won renomination for the governorship in the first Democratic primary of 1928 with a clear majority. In the presidential campaign of 1928 the state Democratic party was rent with dissention on the prohibition and Catholic issues. Despite Governor Moody's appeals for support of the Democratic slate from top to bottom, Herbert Hoover won Texas.

As governor, Moody pursued a strong reform program. He halted a liberal convict-pardon policy initiated by the Fergusons; he also inaugurated a reorganization of prison management. He instituted a complete reorganization of the state highway system, including a program for a connected network of roads; the cost of highways was cut by almost half from that under the Ferguson administration. The office of state auditor and the auditing of state accounts were begun during his administration. Although his proposals were in accord with the thought of the progressive forces of his time, he was not successful in changes he proposed in the Constitution and laws, such as a strong civil service law, the reorganization of the state government, the authorization of the governor to appoint executive officers elected under the Constitution of 1876, and constitutional change to permit the legislature to enact laws separating the subjects of taxation. He also wanted to relocate all state prison properties in a central penal colony near Austin.

In 1931, when he retired from the governorship, he remained in Austin and again entered private law practice. At the request of President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1935, he served as special assistant to the United States attorney general, in charge of prosecuting income-tax-evasion cases in Louisiana. He represented Texas in State of Texas v. New Mexico, a boundary dispute, and represented the governor of Texas in cases involving the right of the governor to declare martial law in the mid-1930s. He last entered active politics in the primary of 1942 as a candidate for the United States Senate against former governors W. Lee O'Daniel and James Allred. Moody came in third in the race. It was his only political defeat.

He became a recognized leader of opposition to the New Deal and the renomination of President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1944. Although most of the conservative "Texas Regular" delegates in the convention walked out, Moody, an organizer of this anti-Roosevelt movement, did not. He stayed on and cast half of the Texas nominating votes for a conservative presidential aspirant; then he stayed within the Democratic party in the general election. He represented former Governor Coke R. Stevenson in his unsuccessful legal challenge to Lyndon B. Johnson's narrow victory over Stevenson in the controversial 1948 United States Senate election. Although a Democrat, he supported Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower for president in 1952 and 1956 and Republican Richard M. Nixon in 1960.

Moody served on numerous committees of the State Bar of Texas. One that he chaired was the special committee to study all phases of the lawyer-client relationship when the lawyer is a member of the legislature. The University of Texas School of Law honored him in 1959 by dedicating its Law Day activities to him. He served as a trustee of the University of Texas Law School Foundation.

Moody married Mildred Paxton of Abilene on April 20, 1926, and they had two children. He died on May 22, 1966, in Austin and was buried in the State Cemetery.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Norman D. Brown, Hood, Bonnet, and Little Brown Jug: Texas Politics, 1921-1928 (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1984). Governors' Records, Texas State Archives, Austin. Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin.

Richard T. Fleming

Handbook of Texas Online, s.v. "MOODY, DANIEL JAMES, JR," (visit link) (accessed August 25, 2005)."
Description:
Governor Dan Moody, who served as Governor from 1921-1931.


Date of birth: 06/01/1893

Date of death: 05/22/1966

Area of notoriety: Politics

Marker Type: Monument

Setting: Outdoor

Visiting Hours/Restrictions: dawn to dusk daily

Fee required?: No

Web site: [Web Link]

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