Hodges ran for office as
lieutenant governor as a Democrat in 1952 and was elected. He succeeded to the position of governor in November 1954 upon the death of Governor
William B. Umstead in office. In 1956, Hodges was elected on his own account to a full four-year term as governor. Because North Carolina had a one-term limit for governors at that time, Hodges had the longest continuous tenure in the office until the state constitution was changed and
Jim Hunt was elected to a second term in 1980. During his time in office, Governor Hodges championed what he called "business progressivism." His modernization efforts included the new Department of Administration to streamline state government; industrial recruitment programs to diversify North Carolina's economy beyond agriculture and textiles; upgrading roads and utilities; and most important, creating the nationally famous
Research Triangle Park in 1959, which linked advanced academic research and inventive young entrepreneurs.To promote better education, Hodges increased funding for public schools and raised teacher salaries. He expanded the state's community college system and encouraged the
University of North Carolina system. However, Hodges faced resistance from rural conservatives who opposed increased state spending and federal involvement. Thanks to his business background and moderate approach on racial issues (he supported "separate but equal" rather than integration) he built coalitions across traditional political lines. For this work, Hodges is credited with leading North Carolina's dramatic transformation from one of the most impoverished states in the Union to one of its most prosperous.
Civil rights In 1959, Hodges became involved in the
Kissing Case, where two young African-American boys (one aged 9, and one aged 7) had been convicted of assault and molestation because a white girl (aged 8) had kissed them each on the cheek. They had been sentenced to the state reformatory. A range of activists, civil rights organizations, Eleanor Roosevelt and President Eisenhower, in addition to the international press, pressured Hodges for clemency. After three months Hodges pardoned them, but refused to apologize. Former First Lady
Eleanor Roosevelt "led an international campaign on their behalf." == Secretary of Commerce ==