Patterson attempted to secure the Republican nomination for governor in 1922, coming in a distant third in the primary in a five-man race. Despite this poor showing, Patterson had strong ties with the party's old guard. He won the chairmanship of the Oregon State Republican Party Central Committee in 1924, going on to chair
Calvin Coolidge's Presidential campaign in Oregon. His profile statewide rose, and this secured him the Republican gubernatorial nomination in 1926. He went on to defeat
Walter M. Pierce in that year's general election. Using President
Calvin Coolidge as an inspiration, Governor Patterson governed the state in a financially conservative manner; streamlining agencies of the state and vetoing legislation that threatened balancing the state's finances. By 1920, the state balanced its budget for the first time in its history. His administration continued improving state roads and highways, established the state's system of higher education, and directed the state prison system to house adult and juvenile criminals separately. He was considered a popular and well-respected figure by rivals and supporters alike. He suddenly died in office of
pneumonia on December 21, 1929, and was buried in Mount Crest Abbey Mausoleum in
Salem. He was succeeded by fellow Republican senate president
Albin Norblad Sr. ==Sources==