north carolina highway historical marker program
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     A fiscal conservative, John Christoph Blucher Ehringhaus (1882-1949) balanced the state’s budget during the worst economic crisis since Reconstruction while offering nominal if unenthusiastic support for the initiatives of the New Deal. The “Depression Governor” was born in Elizabeth City on February 5, 1882.

     Proud of the history of the Albemarle region of North Carolina and of his own German ancestry, Blucher Ehringhaus, as he was known, was the son of merchant Erskine Ehringhaus and the former Catherine Matthews. Educated in local schools, he was graduated from Atlantic Collegiate Institute in 1898 and from the University of North Carolina in 1901. Two years later, Ehringhaus received his law degree in Chapel Hill and returned to his hometown to practice. In 1912 he married Matilda Haughton of Washington County; they would have three children.

     From Pasquotank County in 1905, at age twenty-three, J. C. B. Ehringhaus was elected to the state House for the first of two consecutive terms. In the legislature, where he was the youngest member, he cosponsored the bill to establish East Carolina Teachers Training School (today East Carolina University) and supported a statewide system of high schools. In 1910 Ehringhaus was elected solicitor of the First Judicial District, a post he would hold for twelve years.

     In 1928 the Elizabeth City attorney canvassed the state on behalf of the Democratic ticket, Al Smith for president and O. Max Gardner for governor. Four years later Gardner backed Ehringhaus over his opponents in the Democratic primary, Lieutenant Governor Richard T. Fountain and Revenue Commissioner Allen J. Maxwell. In his campaign in 1932, Ehringhaus called for a “program of progress” and for a balanced budget, goals which meshed with Gardner’s policies. In the fall Ehringhaus easily defeated Republican Clifford C. Frazier.

     Ehringhaus balanced the budget through retrenchment, consolidation, and the introduction of a three percent sales tax on all items except for food staples. That tax, tied to state assumption of school costs and reduction in local property taxes, ran counter to a campaign promise but, with the governor’s backing, passed the 1933 legislature.

     Ehringhaus cut the cost of state government by almost one-third through a reduction in employee salaries and drastic curtailment of spending including a halt to all new highway construction for the 1933-34 biennium. He endorsed penal reform and rural electrification and encouraged the consolidation of state offices, such as the highway and prison departments, and local governments. The school year was extended from six to eight months.

     In September 1933 Ehringhaus closed the tobacco markets in North Carolina and traveled to Washington, D.C., to lobby officials of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration for higher prices for the commodity. The move earned plaudits from Tar Heel farmers. Those same tobacco growers were unforgiving two years later when the governor refused to issue a call for a special session of the legislature to debate the proposed compact of tobacco-growing states. Ehringhaus appeared before a rally of 6,000 farmers at Riddick Stadium in Raleigh on April 21, 1935, and, in a heated ninety-minute speech, held to his position that the compact would not benefit the state.

     Ehringhaus offered his rhetorical support to President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal programs but followed his own cautious path. He declined to provide state matching funds to the Emergency Relief Administration and delayed implementation of provisions of the Social Security Act, passed in 1935, until 1937. His popularity sank after 1935 and, in the speech at Riddick Stadium, he declared that he had had “a bellyfull of public office.”

At no point during his administration was Ehringhaus more publicly embarrassed than in the wake of the botched execution of Allen Foster, a Black North Carolinian convicted of the capital felony of rape. On January 24, 1936, Foster was the first inmate put to death via the gas chamber in North Carolina. Several factors conspired to result in Foster’s brutal and prolonged execution. The nature of his death commanded extensive newspaper coverage and public outcry, including criticism of Ehringhaus himself, damaging the governor’s public image.

Nell Battle Lewis, a prominent critic of the death penalty and a journalist with the News and Observer, wondered in an article “whether the Governor isn’t the major victim of the lethal gas act of 1935.” Despite journalistic speculation that the governor would call a special session of the legislature to investigate the failure more thoroughly, Ehringhaus and his administration doubled down on the gas chamber and moved forward with an execution by gas just five days later. The “successful” and spectacle-free execution put any prospects of further analysis of the new execution method by the Ehringhaus administration to rest.

He declined to run for the U.S. Senate and returned to the practice of law in Raleigh. An Episcopalian, Ehringhaus died on July 31, 1949 and is buried in Elizabeth City.

References:
Carl Abrams, Conservative Constraints: North Carolina and the New Deal (1992)
Anthony J. Badger, Prosperity Road: The New Deal, Tobacco, and North Carolina (1980)
David Leroy Corbitt, ed., Addresses, Letters and Papers of John Christoph Blucher Ehringhaus, Governor of North Carolina, 1933-1937 (1950)
(Raleigh) News and Observer, April 22, 1936 and August 1, 1949
William S. Powell, ed., Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, II, 143-144—sketch by Thomas Morgan
Elmer L. Puryear, Democratic Party Dissension in North Carolina, 1928-1936 (1962)
Robert Sobel and John Raimo, eds., Biographical Directory of the Governors of the United States, 1789-1978, III (1978)
John Christoph Blucher Ehringhaus Papers, North Carolina State Archives, Raleigh
Trina N. Seitz, “The Killing Chair: North Carolina’s Experiment in Civility and the Execution of Allen Foster,” North Carolina Historical Review (Jan 2004)
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