Murphy was the fourth of eight children born to Irish immigrant Catholic parents. His father was a
tannery worker and a
Civil War veteran. Murphy graduated from high school in the factory town of
Hudson, Massachusetts, and secured an entry-level job nailing packing cases for shoes together at a local shoe factory. Murphy worked his way up from this entry position, holding successively more responsible jobs at factories in
Newport,
Manchester, and
Nashua, New Hampshire. During World War I Murphy was chairman of New Hampshire's Committee on Electric Power Supply, and he was a longtime member of the
New Hampshire National Guard. In 1922, Murphy and two partners organized the J.F. McElwain Company, a manufacturer of shoes, and in 1925 Murphy served on Governor
John Gilbert Winant's military staff with the rank of major. He was elected to the
New Hampshire House of Representatives (1931), and to Governor Winant's
Executive Council (1933). By 1936, Murphy's shoe manufacturing plant had grown to twelve shoe manufacturing plants, and J.F. McElwain Company was the largest employer of labor in New Hampshire. Murphy won the Republican nomination for governor in 1936. Then he won the election in the face of an overwhelming electoral landslide for
Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Democrat entering his second of four election victories as president. Even Republican New Hampshire voted (narrowly) for Roosevelt, so much
split-ticket voting was necessary for Murphy to win. He was reelected to a second term in 1938. Governor Murphy supported much
New Deal legislation, particularly legislation which supported labor rights. He also had the traditional New Hampshire concern for sound budgeting. In order to ease homeowners' tax burdens, he eliminated the state tax on real estate in favor of a new tax on tobacco products. The
State House annex was built to bring all state agencies under one roof and improve efficiency. The state got into tourism with the new
Cannon Mountain Tramway, and with new state-owned bathing facilities at
Hampton Beach. The
New Hampshire State Police were established at this time and a statewide system of
probation was set up to make law enforcement more efficient. In 1940, just before he was due to retire as governor, Murphy entered the broadcasting business. He founded Radio Voice of New Hampshire, Inc. and opened WMUR (AM 610, now
WGIR) in 1941. He made one last effort at political life, campaigning against
Styles Bridges for the U.S. Senate seat in 1942. When Murphy lost that election (by 15,000 votes), he returned to his business interests. When television came, he set up
WMUR-TV in 1954. ==Sources==