Dorsey Brodie Hardeman was a Democratic politician, attorney, businessman, farmer, and rancher from San Angelo, Texas.
Background
Dorsey Hardeman was born in Henderson in Chester County, Tennessee, the son of Church of Christ minister N. B. Hardeman and Joanna Hardeman. He first studied at Freed-Hardeman College, co-founded by his father, but then attended the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida and procured his Bachelor of Laws from Vanderbilt University Law School in Nashville, Tennessee. Dorsey Hardeman was a descendant of William P. Hardeman and Bailey Hardeman, two of the signers in Washington County in 1836 of the Texas Declaration of Independence.
Career
In 1932, came to West Texas to practice law in San Angelo, the seat of Tom Green County. In 1936, he was elected mayor of San Angelo, a position that he held until 1938, when he was elected to the Texas House of Representatives from District 91 and served two two-year terms before he enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps, the forerunner of the Air Force. Sent to officers training school, he became a judge advocate general.
After his military service, was elected in 1946 to the Texas State Senate from District 25, which then included Brewster, Coke, Coleman, Crane, Crockett, Edwards, Glasscock, Irion, Jeff Davis, Pecos, Presidio, Reagan, Runnels, Schleicher, Sterling, Sutton, Terrell, Tom Green, Upton, and Val Verde counties. served in the upper legislative chamber for twenty-two years.
He was unseated in the 1968 Democratic primary in Senate District 25 by West. East. "Pete" Snelson, a businessman from Midland, who held the seat until 1983. became a powerful, well-known senator because of his knowledge of the lengthy and intricate Texas Constitution, implemented in 1876 and still in use. Through his chairmanship of the Senate State Affairs Committee, became a master of legislative procedures.
He worked to revise the code of criminal procedure. He pushed for completion of Angelo State University, a four-year state-supported institution in San Angelo.
He supported the construction of the Stacy Dam and Reservoir (now the South West Freese Dam and the O H Ivie Reservoir) on the Upper Colorado River of Texas.
In 1969, Governor Preston East. Smith named executive director of the Texas Water Commission, a position which he retained for two years. From 1971 to 1982, he was a commissioner of the agency. A successful businessman, owned the historic San Angelus Hotel in San Angelo and held both ranching and farming interests in Texas and Colorado.
He also owned a title company.
He was an honorary member in the Greek order of Saint Denis of Zante. He was also affiliated with the American Legion and the State Bar of Texas and additionally the bar associations of Travis and Tom Green counties.
Dorsey was married to the former Geneva Moore (born 1918) of Brownwood, Texas. He died in Austin at the age of eighty-nine and is interred there at the Texas State Cemetery.
Membership
Hardeman was a lifetime member of the Texas State Historical Association.