Vermont Auditor of Accounts
The Vermont State Auditor of Accounts is one of six constitutional officers in Vermont, elected statewide every two years. The Office provides an independent and objective assessment of Vermont's governmental operations.
The current Auditor is Douglas R. Hoffer, a Democrat/Progressive. He was first elected to office in 2012.
Until 1870, Vermont elected their Auditor of Accounts for one-year terms.[1]
Former Vermont Auditors
# | Auditor | Picture | Term | Party |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Elisha Clark | 1790–1797 | No party affiliation | |
2 | Seth Storrs | 1797–1801 | No party affiliation | |
3 | Benjamin Emmons, Jr. | 1801–1807 | No party affiliation | |
4 | Alex Hutchinson | 1807–1813 | Democratic-Republican | |
5 | Job Lyman | 1813–1815 | No party affiliation | |
6 | Alex Hutchinson | 1815–1817 | Democratic-Republican | |
7 | Willis Hall, Jr. | 1817–1819 | No party affiliation | |
8 | Norman Williams | 1819–1823 | Democratic-Republican | |
9 | David Pierce | 1823–1829 | Democratic-Republican | |
1829-1835 | National Republican | |||
1835-1839 | Anti-Masonic | |||
1839-1845 | Whig | |||
10 | Silas H. Hodges | 1845–1850 | Whig | |
11 | Frederick E. Woodbridge | 1850–1853 | Whig | |
12 | William M. Pingry | 1853–1855 | Free Soil | |
1855-1860 | Republican | |||
13 | Jeptha Bradley | 1860–1864 | Republican | |
14 | Dugald Stewart | 1864–1870 | National Union | |
1867-1870 | Republican | |||
15 | Whitman G. Ferrin | 1870–1877 | Republican | |
16 | Jedd P. Ladd | 1877–1879 | Republican | |
17 | E. Henry Powell | 1879–1892 | Republican | |
18 | Franklin D. Hale | 1892–1898 | Republican | |
19 | Orion M. Barber | 1898–1902 | Republican | |
20 | Horace F. Graham | 1902–1917 | Republican | |
21 | Benjamin Gates | 1917–1941 | Republican | |
22 | David V. Anderson | 1941–1965 | Republican | |
23 | Jay H. Gordon | 1965–1969 | Democratic | |
24 | Robert T. King | 1969–1970 | Republican | |
25 | Alexander V. Acebo | 1970–1993 | Republican | |
26 | Edward S. Flanagan | 1993–2001 | Democratic | |
27 | Elizabeth M. Ready | 2001–2005 | Democratic | |
28 | Randy Brock | 2005–2007 | Republican | |
29 | Thomas M. Salmon | 2007-2009 | Democratic | |
2009–2013 | Republican[2] | |||
30 | Doug Hoffer | 2013–present | Democratic/Progressive[3] |
Notes
- Snelling Center (pdf) Archived January 12, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
- Elected as a Democrat in 2006 and 2008, switched to the Republican Party in 2009 and was re-elected in 2010
- Was a member of Progressive Party, but also received and accepted nomination of Democratic Party afterward
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.