Welfare reform, downsizing government and making government more efficient are issues that could be taken from some 1990s political candidate\u27s campaign handbook. But they have been longstanding themes in Maine\u27s political history. Administrative reform was a key element in William Tudor Gardiner\u27s two terms as governor from 1929 to 1933. No study of Gardiner\u27s career would be complete without examining the events encompassing the Administrative Code of 1931, a comprehensive reform bill that was intended to change the way Maine government operated. Claude G. Berube earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in history from Saint Anselm College in 1988 and his Master of Arts in history from Northeastern University in 1990. He is currentl...
William Tudor Gardiner of Gardiner, ME, Governor 1929-1932.https://digitalmaine.com/arc_govportraits...
A weekly newsletter prepared by Paul K. McCann, Public Affairs Manager of Great Northern Paper Compa...
A Message to the People of Maine Delivered Before the Eighth Annual Convention of the Maine Assessor...
In this commentary, Paul Mills discusses the balance between the executive and legislative branches ...
Seven of Maine\u27s seventy-two governors or acting governors were either born in what is today Oxfo...
The budget difficulties faced by Maine and by most other states have prompted a national search for ...
Maine, like the federal government and many other states, has embarked upon a major initiative to ch...
It is important that our school children have a definite knowledge of the early history of our own S...
Remote and thinly populated, Maine was long insulated from many of the demographic and economic tren...
The arrival of the automobile challenged Maine to rethink a road system that dated back to colonial ...
On December 6, 1819 the residents of the District of Maine voted to separate from Massachuesetts and...
Forty-eighth Annual Report of the Appropriations, Receipts and Expenditures of the City of Gardiner ...
In keeping with his promise to make government work better for the people of Maine, Governor Angus K...
The idea of public ownership and development of water resources gained considerable momentum in earl...
In 1983, William E. Nelson published The Roots of American Bureaucracy, 1830–1900. Nelson traced the...
William Tudor Gardiner of Gardiner, ME, Governor 1929-1932.https://digitalmaine.com/arc_govportraits...
A weekly newsletter prepared by Paul K. McCann, Public Affairs Manager of Great Northern Paper Compa...
A Message to the People of Maine Delivered Before the Eighth Annual Convention of the Maine Assessor...
In this commentary, Paul Mills discusses the balance between the executive and legislative branches ...
Seven of Maine\u27s seventy-two governors or acting governors were either born in what is today Oxfo...
The budget difficulties faced by Maine and by most other states have prompted a national search for ...
Maine, like the federal government and many other states, has embarked upon a major initiative to ch...
It is important that our school children have a definite knowledge of the early history of our own S...
Remote and thinly populated, Maine was long insulated from many of the demographic and economic tren...
The arrival of the automobile challenged Maine to rethink a road system that dated back to colonial ...
On December 6, 1819 the residents of the District of Maine voted to separate from Massachuesetts and...
Forty-eighth Annual Report of the Appropriations, Receipts and Expenditures of the City of Gardiner ...
In keeping with his promise to make government work better for the people of Maine, Governor Angus K...
The idea of public ownership and development of water resources gained considerable momentum in earl...
In 1983, William E. Nelson published The Roots of American Bureaucracy, 1830–1900. Nelson traced the...
William Tudor Gardiner of Gardiner, ME, Governor 1929-1932.https://digitalmaine.com/arc_govportraits...
A weekly newsletter prepared by Paul K. McCann, Public Affairs Manager of Great Northern Paper Compa...
A Message to the People of Maine Delivered Before the Eighth Annual Convention of the Maine Assessor...