John Benjamin Kendrick was an American politician and cattleman.
Background
Kendrick was born near Rusk, Texas to John Harvey Kendrick and Anna (Maye) Kendrick. He grew up on a ranch and attended the public schools in Texas until he was in the seventh grade. Kendrick worked as foreman for his father-in-law"s cattle company from 1879 until 1883.
Career
He served as a United States Senator from Wyoming and as the ninth Governor of Wyoming. In March, 1879 he moved cattle from Texas to Wyoming (1,500 miles). He arrived in Wyoming in August, 1879 and settled on a ranch near Sheridan, where he raised cattle as a cowboy, ranch foreman, and later cattle company owner.
He was employed by (and invested in ownership positions in) the Lance Creek Cattle Company (1885), the Converse Cattle Company (1887, owner in 1897).
Kendrick was also President of the First National Bank of Sheridan from 1900 to 1902. In 1909 he was elected President of the Wyoming Stock Growers in 1909.
He was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention from Wyoming in 1916 and 1924. He then served as Governor of Wyoming from 1915 until he resigned in 1917, having been elected as a Democratic candidate to the United States Senate in 1916.
Kendrick was reelected to the Senate in 1922 and 1928 and served from March 4, 1917, until his death at Sheridan, Wyoming, in 1933.
In 1932 he received an honorary law degree from the University of Wyoming. He was credited with beginning the investigations into the Teapot Dome scandal, a bribery incident that took place from 1922 until 1923. He introduced legislation that helped create the Grand Teton National Park in northwestern Wyoming.
He died on November 3, 1933.
Kendrick is interred in Mount Hope Cemetery in Sheridan, Wyoming.
Kendrick was inducted into the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in 1958.
The following children"s book, classified as historical fiction, is loosely based on the life of John B. Kendrick:
Garst, Shannon and Warren Garst. Cowboys and Cattle Trails.
The American Adventure Series.
Edited by Emmett A. Betts. Chicago: Wheeler Publishing Company, 1948. This book has been revised by Patsy Parkin and reprinted as A Real Top Hand: John Benjamin Kendrick.
Wheatland, Wyoming: Spirit Quest Press, 2011.
Parkin is careful to point out that the book remains historical fiction.
Membership
He was a member of the Wyoming State Senate from 1910 to 1914 and was an unsuccessful candidate for election to the United States Senate in 1913. He served as chairman of the Committee on Canadian Relations (Sixty-fifth Congress) and member of the Committee on Public Lands and Surveys (Seventy-third Congress).