Biography of Governor
Ralph L. Carr
By Jason Brockman
Between 1939-1943 Colorado had one of the most courageous
and independent governors ever to be elected. Ralph
Lawrence Carr was born in Rosita, Colorado and educated
in the Cripple Creek school system. After receiving
his LLB from the University of Colorado, Carr moved
to Victor, Trinidad, and then Antonito where he practiced
law and became a publisher. Carr served as a county
attorney of Conejos County, and then as Colorado Assistant
Attorney General. The apex of his legal career occurred
when he became a United States District Attorney.
As a Republican, Carr lost this influential post when
the Democratic "New Dealers" began to dominate
national politics. Despite this loss he was able to
stay in the public eye by becoming a powerful and
prominent water/irrigation lawyer.
In 1939 a struggling Republican Party supported Carr
as their gubernatorial candidate, and won. Within
the first half-hour of his term, Carr proposed a plan
for a balanced budget by transferring state income
taxes from public schools to the state's general fund.
These immediate fiscal measures helped to save our
state from imminent bankruptcy. Also due to Carr's
leadership, the Legislature passed the State Reorganization
Act which greatly increased the efficiency of state
government. As a result, Carr is one of the few governors
known for making the Colorado bureaucracy more operative.
While Carr's policies were aimed at dismantling the
expensive bureaucracy of the New Deal, Carr still
supported Roosevelt's foreign policy and favored American
entrance into World War II after the Japanese bombed
Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. The war with Japan
initiated a chain of events that bred discrimination
and intolerance toward Japanese-Americans. In 1942
an estimated 120,000 Japanese-Americans were stripped
of their property and possessions. These displaced
citizens were resettled in land-locked states by the
War Relocation Authority so that the supposed "yellow
peril" could be contained. The question on many
Coloradans' minds was not whether American citizens
of Japanese decent should be stripped of their rights
and put in internment camps, but where the camps should
be. The overwhelming opinion of the populace was typified
by a series of highway billboards proclaiming "Japs
keep going."
One of the few voices of reason during wartime was
Governor Carr, who continued to treat the Japanese-Americans
with respect and sought to help them keep their American
citizenship. He sacrificed his political career to
bravely confront the often dark side of human nature.
"If you harm them, you must harm me. I was brought
up in a small town where I knew the shame and dishonor
of race hatred. I grew to despise it because it threatened
the happiness of you and you and you." Carr's
selfless devotion to all Americans, while destroying
his hopes for a senate seat, did in the end become
extolled as, "a small voice but a strong voice."
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