{| class=wikitable style="float:right; margin:0 0 0.5em 1em;"
|+Number of Governors of Alabama by party affiliation<ref>Table does not include acting governors. 52 people have served as governor, four twice, one three times; the table includes these non-consecutive terms as well. Table also only includes state governors, which is somewhat moot since the only territorial governor also served as state governor.</ref>
!Party
!Governors
|- {{party shading/Democratic}}
|[[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]
|align=right|48
|- {{party shading/Republican}}
|[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]
|align=right|5
|- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|[[United States Democratic-Republican Party|Democratic-Republican]]
|align=right|3
|-
|Independent
|align=right|1
|}
The following is a '''list of the [[Governor]]s of the [[U.S. state|State]] of [[Alabama]]''' and [[Alabama Territory]]. There have officially been 52 governors of the state of Alabama; this official numbering skips acting governors.{{ref label|adah|A|1}} In addition, five people have served as acting governor, bringing the total number of people serving as governor to 57, spread over 62 distinct terms. The 1901 constitution states that, should the governor be outside of the state for more than 20 days, the lieutenant governor becomes acting governor.{{ref|acting|[B]}} Presidents of the senate or lieutenant governors who replace a governor due to resignation, death or removal from office are not acting governors, but rather fully considered governors. Until 1845, the term of state officials was one year, from then until 1901 it was two years, and since 1901 it has been four years.{{ref label|adah|A|2}}
Four governors have served multiple non-consecutive terms: [[Bibb Graves]], [[James E. Folsom, Sr.]], [[George Wallace]], and [[Fob James|Forrest H. "Fob" James]]. Wallace served three times, the others twice. Officially, these non-consecutive terms are numbered only with the number of their first term. [[William D. Jelks]] also served non-consecutive terms, but his first term was in an acting capacity. Before it became a state, Alabama Territory had only one governor, [[William Wyatt Bibb]]; he also served as the first state governor. [[Lurleen Wallace]], wife of George Wallace, was the first and so far only woman to serve as governor of Alabama, and only the third woman to serve as governor of any state.
*Alabama was part of [[Mississippi Territory]] from 1798 to 1817; see [[List of Governors of Mississippi]] for this period.
*Prior to 1804, parts of Alabama were part of the state of [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]; see [[List of Governors of Georgia]] for this period.
*The southern bit of Alabama was part of the self-proclaimed [[West Florida|Republic of West Florida]] in 1810; it had only one president, [[Fulwar Skipwith]].
*Prior to then, that bit was part of the [[New Spain|Spanish colony]] of [[West Florida]]; see [[List of Colonial Governors of Florida]].
==List of governors==
===Governor of Alabama Territory===
Alabama Territory was formed on [[March 3]] [[1817]] from [[Mississippi Territory]].
{| class="wikitable"
!#!!Name!!Took office!!Left office!!Party!!Appointed by!!Notes
|- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|1
|[[William Wyatt Bibb]]
|[[March 6]] [[1817]]
|[[December 14]] [[1819]]
|[[Democratic-Republican Party|Democratic-Republican]]
|[[James Monroe]]
|<ref>Records are scarce as to when Bibb was actually appointed. The territory was formed on [[March 3]] [[1817]], but he was appointed by [[President of the United States|President]] [[James Monroe]], who didn't take office until the next day. Other resources indicate that other major appointments for the territory were made on [[March 6]] [[1817]]{{ref|pdf|[C]}}; until a better source is found, that is the date used in this article.</ref>
|}
===Governors of Alabama===
The State of Alabama was admitted to the Union on [[December 14]] [[1819]].
[[Image:William Wyatt Bibb.jpg|right|thumb|130px|[[William Wyatt Bibb]], 1st Governor of Alabama]]
[[Image:BenFitz.jpg|right|thumb|130px|[[Benjamin Fitzpatrick]], 11th Governor of Alabama, and [[President pro tempore of the United States Senate|president ''pro tempore'']] of the [[United States Senate|U.S. Senate]]]]
[[Image:THWatts.jpg|right|thumb|130px|[[Thomas H. Watts]], 18th Governor of Alabama, and [[Attorney General]] of the [[Confederate States of America|Confederacy]]]]
[[Image:Rufus W, Cobb.jpg|right|thumb|130px|[[Rufus W. Cobb]], 25th Governor of Alabama]]
[[Image:Braxton Bragg Comer.jpg|right|thumb|130px|[[B. B. Comer]], 33rd Governor of Alabama]]
[[Image:Bob Riley greeting soldiers in Birmingham, 19 Jan, 2004.jpg|right|thumb|130px|[[Bob Riley]], 52nd and present Governor of Alabama]]
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:left;"
!#!!Name!!Took office!!Left office!!Party!![[List of Lieutenant Governors of Alabama|Lt. Governor]]<ref name='ltnone'>The office of Lieutenant Governor was created in the 1868 Constitution, abolished in the 1875 Constitution, and recreated in the 1901 Constitution.{{ref|ltgov|[D]}}</ref>!!Notes
|- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|1
|[[William Wyatt Bibb]]
|[[December 14]] [[1819]]
|[[July 10]] [[1820]]
|[[Democratic-Republican Party|Democratic-Republican]]
|None
|<ref name='died'>Died in office.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|2
|[[Thomas Bibb]]
|[[July 10]] [[1820]]
|[[November 9]] [[1821]]
|Democratic-Republican
|None
|<ref name='presfilled'>As president of the state senate, filled unexpired term.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|3
|[[Israel Pickens]]
|[[November 9]] [[1821]]
|[[November 25]] [[1825]]
|Democratic-Republican
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|4
|[[John Murphy (Alabama)|John Murphy]]
|[[November 25]] [[1825]]
|[[November 25]] [[1829]]
|[[Democratic Party (United States)|Jackson Democrat]]
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|5
|[[Gabriel Moore]]
|[[November 25]] [[1829]]
|[[March 3]] [[1831]]
|Jackson Democrat
|None
|<ref name='electedsenate'>Resigned to take an elected seat in the [[United States Senate]].</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|6
|[[Samuel B. Moore]]
|[[March 3]] [[1831]]
|[[November 26]] [[1831]]
|[[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]
|None
|<ref name='presfilled' />
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|7
|[[John Gayle]]
|[[November 26]] [[1831]]
|[[November 21]] [[1835]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|8
|[[Clement Comer Clay|Clement C. Clay]]
|[[November 21]] [[1835]]
|[[July 17]] [[1837]]
|Democratic
|None
|<ref name='apptsenate'>Resigned to take an appointed seat in the [[United States Senate]].</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|9
|[[Hugh McVay]]
|[[July 17]] [[1837]]
|[[November 30]] [[1837]]
|Democratic
|None
|<ref name='presfilled' />
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|10
|[[Arthur P. Bagby]]
|[[November 30]] [[1837]]
|[[November 22]] [[1841]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|11
|[[Benjamin Fitzpatrick]]
|[[November 22]] [[1841]]
|[[December 10]] [[1845]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|-
|12
|[[Joshua L. Martin]]
|[[December 10]] [[1845]]
|[[December 16]] [[1847]]
|Independent
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|13
|[[Reuben Chapman]]
|[[December 16]] [[1847]]
|[[December 17]] [[1849]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|14
|[[Henry W. Collier]]
|[[December 17]] [[1849]]
|[[December 20]] [[1853]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|15
|[[John A. Winston]]
|[[December 20]] [[1853]]
|[[December 1]] [[1857]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|16
|[[Andrew B. Moore]]
|[[December 1]] [[1857]]
|[[December 2]] [[1861]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|17
|[[John Gill Shorter]]
|[[December 2]] [[1861]]
|[[December 1]] [[1863]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|18
|[[Thomas H. Watts]]
|[[December 1]] [[1863]]
|[[May 1]] [[1865]]
|Democratic
|None
|<ref>Arrested by [[Union (American Civil War)|Union]] forces soon after the [[American Civil War]] ended; was released a few weeks later.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|19
|[[Lewis E. Parsons]]
|[[June 21]] [[1865]]
|[[December 13]] [[1865]]
|Democratic
|None
|<ref>Provisional governor appointed by the [[Union (American Civil War)|Union]] occupation; it would appear that between Watts's arrest and Parsons's appointment, Alabama had no governor.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|20
|[[Robert M. Patton]]
|[[December 13]] [[1865]]
|[[July 24]] [[1868]]
|Democratic
|None
|<ref>The U.S. Congress stripped Patton of most of his authority in March 1867, after which time the state was effectively under the control of Major General Wager Swayne.</ref>
|-
|
|[[Wager Swayne]]
|[[March 2]] [[1867]]
|[[July 14]] [[1868]]
|Military
|None
|<ref>Military governor appointed during [[Reconstruction]]; while Patton was still officially governor, he was mostly a [[figurehead (metaphor)|figurehead]]. The term start date given is the date of the first [[Reconstruction Act]], which put Alabama into the Third Military District; all references only say "March 1867" and "when the Reconstruction Acts were passed". The term end is also ambiguous, but it is assumed Swayne lost power the day Alabama was readmitted to the Union.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Republican}}
|rowspan="2"|21
|rowspan="2"|[[William Hugh Smith|William H. Smith]]
|rowspan="2"|[[July 24]] [[1868]]
|rowspan="2"|[[November 26]] [[1870]]
|rowspan="2"|[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]
|None
|rowspan="2"|<ref>William H. Smith did not voluntarily take office, having been elected in February 1868, due to the failure of voters to ratify the 1868 constitution; he was installed by the U.S. Congress.</ref><ref name='Smith'>Robert Lindsay was sworn in to office, but William H. Smith refused to leave his seat for three weeks, claiming Lindsay was fraudulently elected, finally leaving office on [[November 26]] [[1870]] when a court so ordered.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Republican}}
|[[Andrew J. Applegate]]
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|22
|[[Robert B. Lindsay]]
|[[November 26]] [[1870]]
|[[November 17]] [[1872]]
|Democratic
|[[Edward H. Moren]]
|<ref name='Smith' />
|- {{Party shading/Republican}}
|23
|[[David P. Lewis]]
|[[November 17]] [[1872]]
|[[November 24]] [[1874]]
|Republican
|[[Alexander McKinstry]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|rowspan="2"|24
|rowspan="2"|[[George S. Houston]]
|rowspan="2"|[[November 24]] [[1874]]
|rowspan="2"|[[November 28]] [[1878]]
|rowspan="2"|Democratic
|[[Robert F. Ligon]]
|rowspan="2"|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|None
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|25
|[[Rufus W. Cobb]]
|[[November 28]] [[1878]]
|[[December 1]] [[1882]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|26
|[[Edward A. O'Neal]]
|[[December 1]] [[1882]]
|[[December 1]] [[1886]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|27
|[[Thomas Seay]]
|[[December 1]] [[1886]]
|[[December 1]] [[1890]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|28
|[[Thomas G. Jones]]
|[[December 1]] [[1890]]
|[[December 1]] [[1894]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|29
|[[William C. Oates]]
|[[December 1]] [[1894]]
|[[December 1]] [[1896]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|30
|[[Joseph F. Johnston]]
|[[December 1]] [[1896]]
|[[December 1]] [[1900]]
|Democratic
|None
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|
|[[William D. Jelks]]
|[[December 1]] [[1900]]
|[[December 26]] [[1900]]
|Democratic
|None
|<ref>Acting governor for 26 days. Jelks was president of the state senate when Governor Samford was out of state at the start of his term seeking medical treatment.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|31
|[[William J. Samford]]
|[[December 1]] [[1900]]
|[[June 11]] [[1901]]
|Democratic
|None
|<ref name='died' />
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|rowspan="2"|32
|rowspan="2"|[[William D. Jelks]]
|rowspan="2"|[[June 11]] [[1901]]
|rowspan="2"|[[January 14]] [[1907]]
|rowspan="2"|Democratic
|None
|rowspan="2"|<ref name='preselected'>As president of the state senate, filled unexpired term, and was subsequently elected in his own right.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|[[Russell McWhortor Cunningham|Russell M. Cunningham]]
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|
|[[Russell McWhortor Cunningham|Russell Cunningham]]
|[[April 25]] [[1904]]
|[[March 5]] [[1905]]
|Democratic
|''acting as governor''
|<ref>Acting governor for nearly a year. Cunningham was lieutenant governor when Governor Jelks was out of state for medical treatment.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|33
|[[B. B. Comer]]
|[[January 14]] [[1907]]
|[[January 17]] [[1911]]
|Democratic
|[[Henry B. Gray]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|34
|[[Emmet O'Neal]]
|[[January 17]] [[1911]]
|[[January 18]] [[1915]]
|Democratic
|[[Walter D. Seed, Sr.]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|35
|[[Charles Henderson]]
|[[January 18]] [[1915]]
|[[January 20]] [[1919]]
|Democratic
|[[Thomas Kilby]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|36
|[[Thomas Kilby]]
|[[January 20]] [[1919]]
|[[January 15]] [[1923]]
|Democratic
|[[Nathan L. Miller]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|37
|[[William W. Brandon]]
|[[January 15]] [[1923]]
|[[January 17]] [[1927]]
|Democratic
|[[Charles S. McDowell]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|
|[[Charles S. McDowell]]
|[[July 10]] [[1924]]
|[[July 11]] [[1924]]
|Democratic
|''acting as governor''
|<ref>Acting governor for two days. McDowell was lieutenant governor when Governor Brandon was out of state for 21 days as a delegate for the [[1924 Democratic National Convention]].</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|38
|[[Bibb Graves]]
|[[January 17]] [[1927]]
|[[January 19]] [[1931]]
|Democratic
|[[William C. Davis]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|39
|[[Benjamin M. Miller]]
|[[January 19]] [[1931]]
|[[January 14]] [[1935]]
|Democratic
|[[Hugh D. Merrill]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|''38''
|[[Bibb Graves]]
|[[January 14]] [[1935]]
|[[January 17]] [[1939]]
|Democratic
|[[Thomas E. Knight]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|40
|[[Frank M. Dixon]]
|[[January 17]] [[1939]]
|[[January 19]] [[1943]]
|Democratic
|[[Albert A. Carmichael]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|41
|[[Chauncey Sparks]]
|[[January 19]] [[1943]]
|[[January 20]] [[1947]]
|Democratic
|[[Leven H. Ellis]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|42
|[[Jim Folsom|James E. Folsom, Sr.]]
|[[January 20]] [[1947]]
|[[January 15]] [[1951]]
|Democratic
|[[James C. Inzer]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|43
|[[Gordon Persons]]
|[[January 15]] [[1951]]
|[[January 17]] [[1955]]
|Democratic
|[[James B. Allen]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|''42''
|[[Jim Folsom|James E. Folsom, Sr.]]
|[[January 17]] [[1955]]
|[[January 19]] [[1959]]
|Democratic
|[[William G. Hardwick]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|44
|[[John Malcolm Patterson|John Patterson]]
|[[January 19]] [[1959]]
|[[January 14]] [[1963]]
|Democratic
|[[Albert B. Boutwell]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|45
|[[George Wallace]]
|[[January 14]] [[1963]]
|[[January 16]] [[1967]]
|Democratic
|[[James B. Allen]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|46
|[[Lurleen Wallace]]
|[[January 16]] [[1967]]
|[[May 7]] [[1968]]
|Democratic
|[[Albert Brewer]]
|<ref name='died' />
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|47
|[[Albert Brewer]]
|[[May 7]] [[1968]]
|[[January 18]] [[1971]]
|Democratic
|''vacant''
|<ref name='ltfilled'>As lieutenant governor, filled unexpired term.</ref><ref>At one point in Lurleen Wallace's term, she left the state for 20 days for medical treatment; as lieutenant governor, Brewer became acting governor for part of a day. As soon as she realized this, Wallace rushed back to the state.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|''45''
|[[George Wallace]]
|[[January 18]] [[1971]]
|[[January 15]] [[1979]]
|Democratic
|[[Jere Beasley]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|
|[[Jere Beasley]]
|[[June 5]] [[1972]]
|[[July 7]] [[1972]]
|Democratic
|''acting as governor''
|<ref>Acting governor for 32 days. Beasley was lieutenant governor when Governor George Wallace spent 52 days in [[Maryland]] for medical treatment following an [[assassination]] attempt while campaigning for [[President of the United States]].</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|48
|[[Fob James|Forrest H. "Fob" James Jr.]]
|[[January 15]] [[1979]]
|[[January 17]] [[1983]]
|Democratic
|[[George McMillan]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|''45''
|[[George Wallace]]
|[[January 17]] [[1983]]
|[[January 19]] [[1987]]
|Democratic
|[[Bill Baxley]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Republican}}
|49
|[[H. Guy Hunt]]
|[[January 19]] [[1987]]
|[[April 22]] [[1993]]
|Republican
|{{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[Jim Folsom, Jr.|James E. Folsom, Jr.]]
|<ref>Removed from office upon being convicted of illegally using campaign and inaugural funds to pay personal debts. Hunt was later exonerated of all charges.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|50
|[[Jim Folsom, Jr.|James E. Folsom, Jr.]]
|[[April 22]] [[1993]]
|[[January 16]] [[1995]]
|Democratic
|[[Ryan DeGraffenried|Ryan DeGraffenried, Jr.]]
|<ref name='ltfilled' />
|- {{Party shading/Republican}}
|''48''
|[[Fob James|Forrest H. "Fob" James Jr.]]
|[[January 16]] [[1995]]
|[[January 18]] [[1999]]
|Republican
|{{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[Don Siegelman]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|51
|[[Don Siegelman]]
|[[January 18]] [[1999]]
|[[January 20]] [[2003]]
|Democratic
|{{Party shading/Republican}}|[[Steve Windom]]
|
|- {{Party shading/Republican}}
|rowspan="2"|52
|rowspan="2"|[[Bob Riley|Robert R. Riley]]
|rowspan="2"|[[January 20]] [[2003]]
|rowspan="2"|''Incumbent''
|rowspan="2"|Republican
|{{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[Lucy Baxley]]
|rowspan="2"|<ref>Governor Riley's second term expires in 2011; he is [[term limit]]ed.</ref>
|- {{Party shading/Democratic}}
|[[Jim Folsom, Jr.|James E. Folsom, Jr.]]
|}
===Notes===
{{reflist|2}}
==Other high offices held==
This is a table of congressional, confederate and other federal offices held by governors.{{ref|nga|[E]}} All representatives and senators mentioned represented Alabama except where noted. * denotes those offices which the governor resigned to take.
{| class="wikitable"
!rowspan="2"|Name
!rowspan="2"|Gubernatorial term
!colspan="2"|[[United States Congress|U.S. Congress]]
!rowspan="2"|Other offices held
|-
![[United States House of Representatives|House]]
![[United States Senate|Senate]]
|-
|[[William Wyatt Bibb]]
|1817–1820
|
|
|U.S. Representative and Senator from [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]
|-
|[[Israel Pickens]]
|1821–1825
|
|align="center"|S
|
|-
|[[John Murphy (Alabama)|John Murphy]]
|1825–1829
|align="center"|H
|
|
|-
|[[Gabriel Moore]]
|1829–1831
|align="center"|H
|align="center"|S*
|
|-
|[[John Gayle]]
|1831–1835
|align="center"|H
|
|
|-
|[[Clement Comer Clay]]
|1835–1837
|align="center"|H
|align="center"|S*
|
|-
|[[Arthur P. Bagby]]
|1837–1841
|
|align="center"|S
|[[United States Ambassador to Russia|Ambassador to Russia]]
|-
|[[Benjamin Fitzpatrick]]
|1841–1845
|
|align="center"|S
|[[President pro tempore of the United States Senate|President ''pro tempore'']] of the U.S. Senate (twice)
|-
|[[Joshua L. Martin]]
|1845–1847
|align="center"|H
|
|
|-
|[[Reuben Chapman]]
|1847–1849
|align="center"|H
|
|
|-
|[[John A. Winston]]
|1853–1857
|
|
|Elected to the U.S. Senate but was refused his seat
|-
|[[John Gill Shorter]]
|1861–1863
|
|
|[[Provisional Confederate Congress|Provisional Confederate Deputy]]
|-
|[[Thomas H. Watts]]
|1863–1865
|
|
|[[Attorney General]] of the [[Confederate States of America|Confederate States]]
|-
|[[Lewis E. Parsons]]
|1865
|
|
|Elected to the U.S. Senate but was refused his seat
|-
|[[David P. Lewis]]
|1872–1874
|
|
|Provisional Confederate Deputy
|-
|[[George S. Houston]]
|1874–1878
|align="center"|H
|align="center"|S
|
|-
|[[Joseph F. Johnston]]
|1896–1900
|
|align="center"|S
|
|-
|[[William J. Samford]]
|1900–1901
|align="center"|H
|
|
|-
|[[B. B. Comer]]
|1907–1911
|
|align="center"|S
|
|-
|[[Bob Riley]]
|2003–present
|align="center"|H
|
|
|}
==Living former governors==
[[as of 2007|As of November 2007]], seven former governors were alive, the oldest being [[John Malcolm Patterson|John Patterson]] (1959–1963, born 1921). The most recent governor to die was [[George Wallace]] (1971–1979, 1983–1987), on [[September 13]] [[1998]].
{| class="wikitable"
!Name!!Gubernatorial term!!Date of birth
|-
|[[John Malcolm Patterson|John Patterson]]
|1959–1963
|[[September 27]] [[1921]]
|-
|[[Albert Brewer]]
|1968–1971
|[[October 26]] [[1928]]
|-
|[[Jere Beasley]]
|1972 (acting)
|[[December 12]] [[1935]]
|-
|[[Fob James|Forrest H. "Fob" James Jr.]]
|1979–1983, 1995–1999
|[[September 15]] [[1934]]
|-
|[[H. Guy Hunt]]
|1987–1993
|[[June 17]] [[1933]]
|-
|[[Jim Folsom, Jr.|James E. Folsom, Jr.]]
|1993–1995
|[[May 14]] [[1949]]
|-
|[[Don Siegelman]]
|1999–2003
|[[February 24]] [[1946]]
|}
==References==
;General
* {{cite web |url=http://www.archives.state.al.us/govslist.html |title=List of Alabama Governors |publisher=The Alabama Department of Archives & History|accessdate=2007-08-01}}
* {{cite web | url=http://www.nga.org/portal/site/nga/menuitem.8fd3d12ab65b304f8a278110501010a0?submit=Submit&State=AL | title=Governors of Alabama | publisher=[[National Governors Association]] | accessdate=2007-08-01}}
;Specific
<div class="references-small">
*[A] {{note label|adah|a|1}}{{note label|adah|a|2}}{{cite web | url=http://www.archives.state.al.us/govslist.html | title=Alabama Governors | publisher=Alabama Department of Archives & History | accessdate=2007-07-14}}
*[B] {{note|acting}}{{cite web | url=http://www.legislature.state.al.us/CodeOfAlabama/Constitution/1901/CA-245664.htm | title=Section 127 of the 1901 Alabama Constitution | accessdate=2007-07-14}}
*[C] {{note|pdf}}{{cite book | last=Shearer | first=Benjamin | title=The Uniting States - The Story of Statehood for the Fifty United States, Volume 1: Alabama to Kentucky | url=http://www.greenwood.com/samplepages/0313327033.pdf | format=[[PDF]] | pages=41 | accessdate = 2007-07-14}}
*[D] {{note|ltgov}}{{cite web | url=http://www.legislature.state.al.us/misc/history/constitutions/1868/1868_5.html | title=Article V | work=1868 Constitution of Alabama | accessdate=2007-08-01}}; {{cite web | url=http://www.legislature.state.al.us/misc/history/constitutions/1875/1875_5.html | title=Article V | work=1875 Constitution of Alabama | accessdate=2007-08-01}}; {{cite web | url=http://www.legislature.state.al.us/CodeOfAlabama/Constitution/1901/CA-245649.htm | title=Article V, Section 112 | work=1901 Constitution of Alabama | accessdate=2007-08-01}}
*[E] {{note|nga}}{{cite web | url=http://www.nga.org/portal/site/nga/menuitem.8fd3d12ab65b304f8a278110501010a0?submit=Submit&State=AL | title=Governors of Alabama | publisher=National Governors Association | accessdate=2007-08-01}}
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{{Lists of US Governors}}
{{Alabama}}
[[Category:Lists of United States governors|Alabama]]
[[Category:Governors of Alabama|*]]
[[de:Liste der Gouverneure von Alabama]]
[[es:Lista de Gobernadores de Alabama]]
[[fr:Liste des gouverneurs de l'Alabama]]
[[nl:Lijst van gouverneurs van Alabama]]
[[pl:Gubernatorzy stanu Alabama]]
[[sl:Seznam guvernerjev Alabame]]
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