 
								
									Peter Burnett
									1849–1851
								
 
								
									John McDougal
									1851–1852
								
 
								
									John Bigler
									1852–1856
								
 
								
									J. Neely Johnson
									1856–1858
								
 
								
									John Weller
									1858–1860
								
 
								
									Milton Latham
									1860–1860
								
 
								
									John Downey
									1860–1862
								
 
								
									Leland Stanford
									1862–1863
								
 
								
									Frederick Low
									1863–1867
								
 
								
									Henry Haight
									1867–1871
								
 
								
									Newton Booth
									1871–1875
								
 
								
									Romualdo Pacheco
									1875–1875
								
 
								
									William Irwin
									1875–1880
								
 
								
									George Perkins
									1880–1883
								
 
								
									George Stoneman
									1883–1887
								
 
								
									Washington Bartlett
									1887–1887
								
 
								
									Robert Waterman
									1887–1891
								
 
								
									Henry Harrison Markham
									1891–1895
								
 
								
									James Budd
									1895–1899
								
 
								
									Henry Gage
									1899–1903
								
 
								
									George Pardee
									1903–1907
								
 
								
									James Gillett
									1907–1911
								
 
								
									Hiram Johnson
									1911–1917
								
 
								
									William Stephens
									1917–1923
								
 
								
									Friend Richardson
									1923–1927
								
 
								
									C.C. Young
									1927–1931
								
 
								
									James Rolph
									1931–1934
								
 
								
									Frank Merriam
									1934–1939
								
 
								
									Culbert Olson
									1939–1943
								
 
								
									Earl Warren
									1943–1953
								
 
								
									Goodwin Knight
									1953–1959
								
 
								
									Edmund G. "Pat" Brown
									1959–1967
								
 
								
									Ronald Reagan
									1967–1975
								
 
								
									Edmund G. "Jerry" Brown
									1975–1983
								
 
								
									George Deukmejian
									1983–1991
								
 
								
									Pete Wilson
									1991–1999
								
 
								
									Gray Davis
									1999–2003
								
 
								
									Arnold Schwarzenegger
									2003–2011
								
 
								
									Edmund G. "Jerry" Brown
									2011–2019
								
 
								
									Gavin Newsom
									2019–Present
								
 
					(Previous term: 1975–1983)
						Born: April 7, 1938 in San Francisco, California
						
						Married: Anne Gust on June 18, 2005 in Oakland, CA
						Political Party: Democrat
					
						Father: Edmund "Pat" Brown
						Mother: Bernice Layne
						Wife: Anne Gust
						Children: None 
					
Find out more about the time period and interests of Edmund G. "Jerry" Brown
Did You Know?
 Biography
BiographyEdmund G. "Jerry" Brown, Jr., the son of former Governor Pat Brown (1959-1967), was born in San Francisco on April 7, 1938. He graduated with degrees in Latin and Greek from the University of California, Berkeley in 1961 and received a juris doctorate from Yale in 1964. His education also included studies at the Jesuit Seminary in Los Gatos, California.
Following law school, Brown worked as a law clerk to California Supreme Court Justice Mathew Tobriner, traveled and studied in Mexico and Latin America, then took up residence in Los Angeles, working for a law firm. In 1968, he helped qualify a slate of presidential delegates to oppose the re-nomination of President Lyndon Johnson. The following year, Brown was elected to the Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees.
In 1970, Brown was elected California's Secretary of State, a position he held until his inauguration as Governor in 1975. As governor, he had strong ideas about state spending and refused to live in the new governor's mansion, renting a modest apartment instead, and nixing the governor's limousine in favor of a state-issued Plymouth. He focused on energy efficiency and alternative power sources, sponsored and signed the first labor laws in the United States to protect farm workers, and signed into law the California Conservation Corps (CCC) program. His appointments emphasized minorities and women, echoing the social awareness of his era.
After his two terms as governor, Brown unsuccessfully ran for United States Senator in 1982. He then travelled extensively, returned to his law practice in Los Angeles, and in 1989 became chairman of the state Democratic Party. He resigned that position in 1991, and unsuccessfully sought the 1992 Democratic Presidential nomination. In 1998, Brown was elected Mayor of Oakland, California. Brown was re-elected in 2002 and held the post until 2007.
Brown was elected Attorney General of California in 2006 and announced his candidacy for Governor in March, 2010. Since Brown's previous terms in office were not covered by term limit laws enacted in 1990, he was not barred from running for Governor again. Jerry Brown is the only governor to return to the office after serving years before.
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