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It fits perfectly that
Paul Patton's chosen field as a young man bound for college was mechanical
engineering. He's been building strong foundations and organizations in
all areas of his career - be it as a success in the coal business or in
public service - ever since he started. His determination, leadership and
profound sense of teamwork have brought results to every area of his life.
He has said that for him, "United We Stand, Divided We Fall" is more than
a state motto - it has been a way of life.
Paul Patton is
unabashed when he pays tribute to the role his family and his home near
Louisa have played in his life and career. He is proud of his heritage and
says there aren't many places on earth that can leave an impact on one's
values like Eastern Kentucky. "I know of no place with greater extremes -
physical and human - or greater pride and strength." He credits the
freedom that he and his sisters enjoyed on their small farm in Fallsburg
in Lawrence County for the sense of independence, self-confidence and
originality that defines Kentucky's 59th Governor today.
"Louisa is 'my roots.'
It's where my parents, Irene and Ward Patton and their parents, gave me a
sense of ethics and strong values."
Governor Patton
graduated from Louisa High School in 1955. Because his father, a teacher,
knew first hand the value of education and saved every month for his son's
education, Paul attended the University of Kentucky. It was there that he
began preparing for his successful career in business and government,
graduating in 1959. He then accepted an offer to work as a laborer in a
coal mine in McDowell in Floyd County where he learned everything he could
about the coal business. That determination led to establishing his own
coal company which he ran until 1979.
The coal business
provided Paul Patton and others in the region work when there weren't many
other options in Eastern Kentucky. But he saw too many neighbors and
friends leave the mountains to find work elsewhere and he was determined
to find a way to change that migration from Eastern Kentucky. After 20
years of working and running his own company, he looked to public service,
joining the administration of John Y. Brown Jr. in 1979 as deputy
transportation secretary. During this time he also served as chairman of
the Democratic Party of Kentucky. He ran for office himself in 1981 and
won the race for Pike County Judge-Executive.
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Paul
Patton steps up to the plate with a homemade baseball bat, close to his
home in Lawrence County.

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While serving the
citizens of Pike County, Paul Patton brought much needed infrastructure to
that region of Kentucky and provided a style of progressive leadership
that earned him accolades as the best county judge in the Commonwealth. He
championed the effort to stabilize the Coal Severance Tax Program, which
continues to increase the amount of severance tax that is returned to coal
producing counties. Other counties worked to emulate the results that his
style of leadership brought to his Eastern Kentucky county.
"We knew that a better
future for our citizens could begin right here and that we had to work
together to make the future a reality. We had to, as always, depend on our
own creativity and perseverance. We built new roads, water lines, sewers
and built a whole new system for training and educating our work force.
What I learned as a miner starting out held true: if we don't work
together, we don't work. It remains my philosophy today."
In 1991, Paul Patton
won his first statewide race for the office of Lieutenant Governor of the
Commonwealth of Kentucky and became the first person elected to that
office to also head a state cabinet. In his capacity as Secretary of the
Cabinet for Economic Development, Patton continued his work to bring jobs
to Kentucky. Economic development legislation Governor Patton wrote and
helped pass in 1992 was modeled on his 1987 proposal to provide incentive
programs to counties with consistently high unemployment rates. These
programs have been credited with creating thousands of jobs across
Kentucky.
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Governor Patton as a boy, with his sisters Jo Ann, right,
and Linda |
As a builder, Paul Patton knows that a solid foundation makes all
the difference to the sustainability of the structure. Besides his
reverence for his parents and grandparents, sisters and cousins, he says
there is no one more important to him than his wife, Judi. "She's my
partner in life and coming from a family dedicated to public service as
she does, she is my inspiration for my public career. We are a team in
every sense of the word as we build a better life for our children, our
grandchildren and all Kentuckians. I've been fortunate to have such
success in business, in public service and the gift of a wonderful family.
We're very proud and grateful that the citizens of Kentucky have given us
this opportunity to contribute." |