Gainford P. "Gub" Mix (October 15, 1876 – June 28, 1944) was an American
politician and farmer from
Idaho.[1][2][3] He served as the state's 19th and 21st
lieutenant governor.
Early life and education
Born in
Grand Island, Nebraska, Mix came by wagon to
north central Idaho as a child with his family of twelve in 1883. His parents, Franklin E. Mix (1838–1919) and Mary Grimes Mix (1841–1904), settled in the
Palouse region, near
Moscow.[4][5] A portion of the family's farm at the west end of Moscow is now the
Palouse Mall.[3][6]
Mix was the first student at the
University of Idaho in Moscow in October 1892, starting at its prep school as a teenager.[1] He was the first graduate of the College of Agriculture in 1901,[7] a quarterback on the
football team,[3] and later its graduate manager.[8][9][10]
Career
Mix was elected to two two-year terms as lieutenant governor, in 1930 and 1934, both with
GovernorC. Ben Ross. He ran for the
U.S. Senate in 1932, but was defeated in the primary by
James Pope, the
mayor of
Boise.[11][12] Mix ran for governor in
1936, but lost a close three-way race in an eight-man Democratic primary, won by
Barzilla Clark.[13][14][15]
Personal life
Mix married Maude Gale (1882–1965) in 1901 and they had five children: four sons (Gale, John, Leslie, and Gainford W.) and a daughter (Mrs. Hal Price).[1][16] The eldest, Gale (1902–1971), was the
athletic director at the University of Idaho from 1950 to 1954.[17][18] He coached at
Moscow High School in the early 1930s[19][20] and was a longtime university employee.[21][22][23][24] Gainford W. Mix (1911–2000) earned a degree in agriculture from the UI and ran the family farm after his father's death.[25][26][27] He also managed the
Federal Land Bank in Moscow from 1959 to 1974.[26][28]
Death
Mix died in 1944 in Moscow at age 67 at
Gritman Hospital, after a paralytic stroke;[29] he and his wife are buried at the city cemetery.