Robert Docking | |
---|---|
38th Governor of Kansas | |
In office January 9, 1967 – January 13, 1975 |
|
Lieutenant |
John Crutcher James H. DeCoursey, Jr. Reynolds Schultz Dave Owen |
Preceded by | William H. Avery |
Succeeded by | Robert F. Bennett |
Personal details | |
Born |
Robert Blackwell Docking October 9, 1925 Kansas City, Missouri |
Died | October 8, 1983 Merriam, Kansas |
(aged 57)
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Meredith Marina Gear |
Profession | Banker, Oilman, Politician |
Religion | Presbyterian |
Robert Blackwell Docking (October 9, 1925 – October 8, 1983) was the 38th Governor of Kansas from 1967 until 1975.
Born in Kansas City, Missouri, Docking attended public school in Lawrence, Kansas, before attending the University of Kansas, and served in the Air Force during World War II. After the war, Docking moved to Arkansas City, Kansas, where he became a successful banker, and was elected mayor.
Docking was elected governor in 1966 as a member of the Democratic Party over the incumbent Republican, William Avery, whom Docking harangued for leaving the state when there was work to be done in Kansas. Docking served more terms than any other Kansas governor, but is tied for length of service because of a constitutional amendment approved during his final term which provided that Kansas governors serve four-year terms, and are constitutionally prohibited from running for more than two terms. He was known for his commitment to farmers, small business owners, and the environment.
The son of former Gov. George Docking (1957–1961), he was married to Meredith and they had two sons, William and Tom, the latter of whom served as lieutenant governor and ran unsuccessfully for the governorship in 1988. After his service as governor, Docking resumed his former profession of banking in Arkansas City. He donated his papers to the University of Kansas rather than give them to the Kansas State Historical Society, where the papers of his 34 predecessors are stored, with the exception of his father, who burned his gubernatorial papers.
He died of emphysema in 1983 in Merriam, Kansas, the day before his 58th birthday, and is interred in Highland Park Cemetery in Kansas City, Kansas, in a plot adjoining his parents'.
A State Office building across the street from the capital in Topeka, Kansas bears his name, and his bank in Arkansas City (Union State Bank), which is still owned by the Dockings, is on the National Register of Historic Places.