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William Walton Kitchin, lawyer,
congressman, and governor of North Carolina, was born in rural Halifax
County near Scotland Neck; the son of William Hodge and Maria Figures
Arrington Kitchin. His father was a captain in the 12th Regiment of
the North Carolina Infantry in the Civil War. Young Kitchin received
his early education in local schools, including the Vine Hill Academy
in Halifax County, after which he entered Wake Forest College and
graduated in 1884, at age eighteen, with the B.A. degree.
After leaving Wake Forest he taught for
a session at Vine Hill Academy, then spent one year (1885–1886) as
editor of the Democrat in Scotland Neck. In 1867 he studied law
at the University of North Carolina under Professor John Manning
having laready read law with his father for more than a year. He
passed the North Carolina Bar examination the same year. Late in 1887
Kitchin went to Texas, but there is no record of his activity there;
he return to North Carolina and settled in Roxboro in 1888 to practice
law. Two years later, as chairman of the Democratic executive
committee of Person County, he began his political career.
Kitchen is credited with having led
Person County into "the Democratic fold" after years of
Republican dominance. He was an unsuccessful candidate for the state
senate in 1892 but in 1896 won his party's nomination for a seat in
the U.S. House of Representatives from the Fifth Congressional
District. Thomas Settle, a Republican, was the incumbent. Kitchin was
the only Democratic elected from North Carolina that year. Reelected
fro six terms, he served from 1896 to 1908.
Those who have appraised Kitchin's
performance on Capitol Hill find little to write about. He was a
member of the committee on Naval Affairs and of the Congressional
Campaign Committee for the Democratic Party. One of his best known
speeches in Congress was in defense of the Suffrage Amendment at a
time when white supremacy and suffrage were pertinent issues in his
state.
In any case, Congressman Kitchin
retained the respect of this party. When the Democratic convention met
in Charlotte in 1908, he won the gubernatorial nomination—but only
after sixty–one rounds of balloting. His opponents were Locke Craig,
later elected governor, and Ashley Horne. All three candidates were
popular political leaders in North Carolina. Kitchin won the election
in November over the Republican nominee, J. Elwood Cox, and took
office on January 12, 1909.
If his years in Congress were
lackluster, his tenure as governor was highly successful. It was a
time of tremendous increases in expenditures for public education,
public health service to the feebleminded, and expansion of swampland
affected by significant drainage laws. In addition, those years saw
great expansion of railroads and general improvement in the stability
of the state's bank institutions. "No governor of this State has
ever had so many recommendations enacted into law." (Carey J.
Hunter, Carolina Democrat, December 22, 1922.)
During his last year as governor,
Kitchin's was one of four names mentioned in the state's first regular
popular election to the U.S. Senate: Charles Brantley Aycock
(d.1912), who was mentioned early; Chief Justice Walter Clark of the
NOrth Carolina Supreme Court, a jurist of great wisdom and poise:
Furnifold M. Simmons, the incumbent U.S. Senator who had in his term
scored a distinctive record in Washington; and Kitchin, who had served
a dozen years in Congress and over three years as a progressive
governor. The North Carolina press reported it as a vigorous campaign.
Although there was some doubt as to the ultimate winner, Senator
Simmons emerged victor with a clear majority over Clark and Kitchin.
After completing his term Governor
Kitchin practiced law in Raleigh, where he formed a partnership with
Judge James S. Manning, his campaign manager, that lasted for six
years. In 1919 he suffered a stroke and retired to his home in
Scotland Neck.
Personal Notes
On December 22, 1892, Kitchin married Musette Satterfield of Roxboro,
the daughter of William Clement Satterfield. They have six children.
She made a reputation as one of the most charming and popular
hostesses of the Governor's mansion.
Kitchin was an active member of Baptist
churches where he lived, as well as a member of three fraternal
orders: Ancient, Free, and Accepted Masons; Improved Order of Odd
Fellows; and Knights of Pythias. He died in Scotland Neck; after
funeral services in the Baptist Church there, he was buried in the
local cemetery. A portrait of him, presented by R.O. Everett of
Durham, hangs in the Person County Courthouse and also another
portrait in the capitol in Raleigh.
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