Miles was born in
Murfreesboro, Tennessee. He attended the common schools of
Tennessee, but left home at the age of seventeen. He settled in
Texas and began farming. he did moderately well in that field, but a crop failure in 1906 convinced him to move to
Oklahoma and then to
New Mexico. He took a homestead there and married Susie C. Wade. Susie Wade was a member of the Choctaw Nation. Miles began to dabble in
politics as an observer at first. When the
United States Democratic Party began to take back the
New Mexico Legislature in the 1920s, he started taking an active role in the political spectrum. He served in several offices including Quay County Assessor (1920–1924), secretary of the New Mexico State Tax Commission (1925), and secretary of the Democratic State Central Committee. Miles came virtually out of nowhere to be elected
Governor in 1938. Upon completion of Miles' term as Governor he returned to holding various low-level organizational positions including chairman of the Public Service Commission (1943–1948), and
Commissioner of Public Lands (1947–1948). Finally, in 1948, the Democratic Party figured Miles would be an easy shot to take out
Georgia Lee Lusk in a primary for her
Congressional seat. He just barely edged out Lusk, and only served one term as a Congressman (1949–1951) before retiring from public life. Miles died on October 7, 1971. ==References==