The office of lieutenant governor of Mississippi was established by the state's 1817 constitution and it and the governorship were the only popularly elected statewide positions at the time, with both serving two-year terms. The first lieutenant governor was
Duncan Stewart, who took office on October 7, 1817. The role was eliminated in the 1832 constitution and replaced with a President of the Senate chosen by the body's own members. It was reintroduced in the 1869 constitution and absorbed the responsibilities of presiding over the Senate, with the holder serving a term of four years. During the
Reconstruction era in the early 1870s,
Alexander Kelso Davis served as one of the first black lieutenant governors in the country.
Evelyn Gandy, who served as lieutenant governor from 1976 to 1980, was the first woman to hold the office in the state and in the
Southern United States.
Brad Dye, who held the office over three terms from 1980 to 1992, was the state's longest-serving lieutenant governor. Unlike previous holders of the office, he used his appointment power in the Mississippi Senate to strategically place his allies on committees to advance his own political goals. In January 1986, two state senators sued the lieutenant governor, challenging the legality of his legislative prerogatives on the grounds that they violated the
separation of powers language in the state constitution. The case escalated to the
Mississippi Supreme Court, which ruled in 1987 that the Senate could award significant legislative powers to the official at its wish. One justice dissented, arguing that the ruling made the lieutenant governor "a powerful legislative creature, a super-senator, vested with sufficient legislative authority to virtually dominate the entire Senate." == Election ==