Woody Freeman

Elwood A. Freeman, known as Woody Freeman (born December 28, 1946), is a businessman in Jonesboro, Arkansas, who was the Republican gubernatorial nominee in 1984. He lost to the incumbent Governor Bill Clinton, the Democrat who eight years later was elected President of the United States. Freeman was the third of four Republicans whom Clinton dispatched in his five successful races for governor.
Freeman is the son of Elwood A. Freeman (born 1918) and Mildred Hout Freeman (born 1919). The couple divorced, and in 1962, the senior Freeman married the former Elaine E. Stanfield (born 1920). Woody Freeman is married to the former Lynda Brown (born 1947).
Political career
Prior to the gubernatorial bid, Freeman served for eight years on the nonpartisan Jonesboro School Board and was the president of the board from 1978 to 1981. Freeman was appointed by Republican Governor Frank D. White to the Arkansas Board of Higher Education in 1981, serving until he resigned to run in 1984 for governor. He won the Republican nomination over Erwin Davis, an attorney from Fayetteville. A political writer described both Freeman and Davis as "articulate and attractive young men who vigorously sought the nomination."
As a Republican nominee, Freeman was a credible candidate when he challenged Clinton who was seeking his third and last two-year term in the office. Clinton claimed that if Freeman were elected the Arkansas legislature would scuttle certain education reforms approved in the fall of 1983. In an appearance in Little Rock on November 3, 1984, President Ronald W. Reagan told a rally, "Please send Woody Freeman to the statehouse." Former United States Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger also campaigned for Freeman but seemed to have little of substance to offer the Arkansas candidate. Clinton prevailed with 554,561 votes to Freeman's 331,987. When Clinton won again in 1986, by defeating former Governors Orval E. Faubus in the Democratic primary and Frank White in the general election, and in 1990, over the Republican Sheffield Nelson, he was elected to four-year terms, the latter of which he served for only two years.
After his own campaign, Freeman continued to contribute to Republican candidates, including former U.S. Representative Rick Lazio of New York, the unsuccessful candidate against Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton for the United States Senate in the 2000 general election. In 2002, he donated to the failed effort by Republican U.S. Senator Tim Hutchinson to win reelection in Arkansas. In 1999, he contributed to Hutchinson's brother, U.S. Representative Asa Hutchinson, thereafter the unsuccessful Republican gubernatorial nominee in 2006.
Business career
Just after his race for governor, Freeman co-founded Continental Computer Corporation in Jonesboro, the developer of software which allows funeral homes to upload obituaries to the National Obituary Archive with a single click of the mouse. Freeman once claimed that he started the company with a $3 checking account.
Freeman has been an advocate of expanding business opportunities in Jonesboro. In 2006, he spoke in favor of allowing restaurants to serve liquor though Craighead County is dry. Freeman said the rejuvenated downtown Jonesboro is "very impressive" for people bringing jobs to the area.
 
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