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  1. 13. William P. Hobby. William Pettus Hobby (1878-1964), editor, publisher, and governor of Texas, was born in Moscow, Texas, on March 26, 1878, the son of Eudora Adeline (Pettus) and Edwin E. Hobby. One of six children, Hobby moved in 1893 with his family from Livingston to Houston, where he entered Houston High School.

  2. William Pettus Hobby Jr. (born January 19, 1932)[1] is an American Democratic politician who served a record eighteen years as the 37th Lieutenant Governor of Texas. He held that office from January 16, 1973 to January 15, 1991 for five unprecedented terms, he was the last lieutenant governor to serve a two-year term and the first elected to a four-year term when the Texas Constitution was ...

  3. William P. Hobby. William Pettus Hobby (* 26.März 1878 in Moscow, Polk County, Texas; † 7. Juni 1964 in Houston, Texas) war ein US-amerikanischer Politiker und von 1917 bis 1921 Gouverneur des Bundesstaates Texas.

  4. 26. Jan. 2015 · Indeed, the guest list for Wednesday night’s raucous bash celebrating Hobby’s 83rd birthday was a virtual who’s-who of Texas politics. Laughs kept rolling as Roberston and her co-chair-slash-sidekick Lynne Bentsen summoned University of Houston Chancellor and President Renu Khator to the stage. After officially welcoming partygoers to the land of red – crimson hues flushed the walls ...

  5. Hobby served as a member on the Board of Directors of Texas Technological College. Family. His son William P. Hobby Jr. also served as lieutenant governor of Texas from 1973 to 1991. His daughter, Jessica, was married to Henry E. Catto Jr., who became the Ambassador of the United States to the Court of St James's. His grandson, Paul Hobby ...

  6. William P. Hobby Jr. William Pettus “Bill” Hobby Jr. (born January 19, 1932) [1] is an American Democratic politician who served a record eighteen years as the 37th Lieutenant Governor. Hobby Jr. held that office from January 16, 1973 to January 15, 1991 for five unprecedented terms, he was the last lieutenant governor to serve a two-year ...

  7. William P. Hobby, Jr. William “Bill” Hobby, Texas' lieutenant governor for 18 years, served in that office longer than any other person elected to it. When he was first sworn into office in 1973, Bill Hobby continued a family association with the Texas Senate covering three generations and spanning more than a century. His grandfather,