Background
Kelly was born in Ottawa, Illinois, the son of Mary Agnes (Morrissey) and Henry Michael Kelly, a lawyer Kelly spent a year assisting his father in his law office before enrolling at Notre Dame University, where he received a law degree in 1917.
Education
University of Notre Dame.
Career
He served as the 39th Governor of Michigan from 1943 to 1947. He was from an Irish Catholic family. He served in the United States. Army during World War I, was wounded and lost his right leg in the Battle of Chateau-Thierry, where he also earned the Croix de guerre with palm leaves.
Upon his return to the United States, Kelly joined the American Liberty bond drive.
After the war, Kelly established a career in public service. He served as the state"s attorney for LaSalle County, Illinois from 1920 to 1924.
During that time, his father moved to Detroit to represent General Motors in Michigan. In 1929, Kelly married Anne Veronica O"Brien, and they had six children together.
The following year, he became the assistant prosecuting attorney for Wayne County, Michigan, where he served until 1934.
Kelly was selected by Governor Frank Fitzgerald to head the Detroit area Liquor Control Commission. Fitzgerald later asked him to run for Michigan Secretary of State, and Kelly was elected, serving from 1939-1943. When Fitzgerald died suddenly and Lieutenant Governor Luren Dickinson took the Governorship, Dickenson turned to Kelly for assistance, and for approximately two years Harry acted as chief counsel and confidante to Governor Dickinson.
In 1942, the Republican party turned to Kelly as a candidate for governor, and on November 3, 1942, he defeated Democratic Governor Murray Van Wagoner in the general election to become Governor of Michigan.
In 1944, while governor, he served as a delegate to the Republican National Convention which nominated Thomas East. Dewey for United States. President. He was elected to a second two-year term in 1946, and during his four years in office, the state government was reorganized and a grand jury was convened to examine misappropriations in the legislature.
Also during his tenure as governor, Kelly appointed Vera Burridge Baits and Roscoe Bonisteel as Regents to the University of Michigan. The War Governor, as he was nicknamed, declined to run for re-election in 1946.
After serving out his second term, Kelly returned to private practice until, in 1950, the Republican party again asked him to run for governor.
He lost a close race to Governor G. Mennen Williams by only 1154 votes. In 1954, he was nominated by the Republican party to a seat on the Michigan Supreme Court. He was elected, and served from 1954-1971.
Earlier, Brian Kelly costarred with John Ashley as the co-owner of the "Straightaway Garage" on American Broadcasting Company"s Straightaway, which focuses on auto racing.
Kelly died at the age of seventy-five while in West Palm Beach, Florida. He is interred at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery of Southfield, Michigan.