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The Carnahan family is a prominent political family from Missouri. [1] [2] [3] Members of the family have served in the United States House of Representatives, in the United States Senate and in various state offices in Missouri. Notable members of the family include:
Jean Carnahan (1933–2024), first Missouri woman to become a U.S. Senator, matriarch of Carnahan political family; Mel Carnahan (1924–2000), governor, posthumous U.S. Senator (died in plane crash three weeks before he was elected), patriarch of Carnahan political family; Robin Carnahan (born 1961), Missouri Secretary of State
She graduated in 1955 with a degree in Business and Public Administration, the first in her family to graduate from high school and college. She was an alumna of Kappa Delta sorority. [3] Jean and Mel married on June 12, 1954. [4] Two years later, they moved to his home state of Missouri. [5] They settled in Rolla, where Mel opened a law ...
“This is the beer that built Missouri,” said state Rep. Wes Rogers. “How many families have been employed by Anheuser-Busch? How many Missourians buy a 30-pack of Busch Light every single ...
Missouri is the 30th richest state in the United States of America, with a per capita income of $19,936 ... family income Population Number of households 1 Platte:
Missouri Governor Mel Carnahan established the Family Investment Trust (FIT) in November 1993, which was changed to Family and Community Trust (FACT) by Governor Bob Holden in April 2001. FACT, which is housed within the Missouri Department of Social Services, is designed to lead a collaborative effort to improve the conditions of Missouri's ...
Now Williams, 55, is set to be executed in Missouri on Tuesday as Gayle's "grieving family still waits" for the end of the 26-year-old murder case, and former schoolmates and colleagues remember ...
Poor economic conditions persisted through the 1820s, and Pugh Price decided to move his family to the state of Missouri, where tobacco production competed with Virginia's tobacco and slavery was legal. [8] The Price family reached Missouri in either 1830 [5] or 1831 [9] and temporarily settled near Fayette. [10]