For more information about the office of the lieutenant governor, see the Encyclopedia of Alabama.
Lieutenant Governor |
County |
Term |
Political Party |
Will Ainsworth |
Marshall |
2019 - |
Republican |
Kay Ivey |
Wilcox |
2011 - 2017 |
Republican |
James E. Folsom, Jr. |
Cullman |
2007 - 2011 |
Democrat |
Lucy Baxley |
Houston |
2003 - 2007 |
Democrat |
Steve Windom |
Mobile |
1999 - 2003 |
Republican |
Don Siegelman |
Mobile |
1995 - 1999 |
Democrat |
James E. Folsom, Jr. |
Cullman |
1987 - April 22, 1993 |
Democrat |
Bill Baxley |
Houston |
1983 - 1987 |
Democrat |
George McMillan, Jr. |
Jefferson |
1979 - 1983 |
Democrat |
Jere Beasley |
Barbour |
1971 - 1979 |
Democrat |
Albert P. Brewer |
Morgan |
1967 - May 1968 |
Democrat |
James B. Allen |
Etowah |
1963 - 1967 |
Democrat |
Albert B. Boutwell |
Jefferson |
1959 - 1963 |
Democrat |
William G. Hardwick |
Houston |
1955 - 1959 |
Democrat |
James B. Allen |
Etowah |
1951 - 1955 |
Democrat |
James C. Inzer |
Etowah |
1947 - 1951 |
Democrat |
Leven H. Ellis |
Shelby |
1943 - 1947 |
Democrat |
Albert A. Carmichael |
Geneva |
1939 - 1943 |
Democrat |
Thomas E. Knight, Jr. |
Hale |
1935 - 1937 |
Democrat |
Hugh D. Merrill |
CCalhoun |
1931 - 1935 |
Democrat |
William C. Davis |
Cullman |
2007 - 2011 |
Democrat |
James E. Folsom, Jr. |
Walker |
1927 - 1931 |
Democrat |
Charles S. McDowell, Jr. |
Barbour |
1923 - 1927 |
Democrat |
Nathan L. Miller |
Jefferson |
1919 - 1923 |
Democrat |
Thomas E. Kilby |
Calhoun |
1915 - 1919 |
Democrat |
Walter D. Seed, Sr. |
Tuscaloosa |
1911 - 1915 |
Democrat |
Henry B. Gray |
Jefferson |
1907 - 1911 |
Democrat |
Russell M. Cunningham |
Jefferson |
1903 - 1907 |
Democrat |
Robert F. Ligon |
Macon |
1874 - 1867 |
Democrat |
Alexander McKinstry |
Mobile |
1872 - 1874 |
Republican |
Edward H. Moren |
Bibb |
1807 - 1872 |
Democrat |
Andrew J. Applegate |
Madison |
1868 - 1870 |
Republican |
Note:
- This office was created by the Constitutional Convention of 1867, abolished by the Constitutional Convention of 1875, and recreated by the 1901 Constitutional Convention.