Dorothy Sample

Dorothy Eaton Sample (1911 – September 1, 2002) was an American politician in the state of Florida. A Republican, she was a member of the Florida House of Representatives for the 61st district between 1976 and 1982 and for the 54th district between 1982 and 1988.

Early life
Sample was born in Nyack, New York. Her mother was Olive B. Eaton, a teacher. She had a brother, Ted, and a sister, Mary. She was a descendant of John Eaton, a territorial governor, and two of her cousins, Dan and John McCarty, were also Florida politicians. Sample received her undergraduate degree in economics from Duke University and her law degree from Duke Law School. She received a license to practice law in North Carolina. She moved from Nashville, Tennessee, to St. Petersburg, Florida, in 1948.

She held various jobs while in Pinellas County, including as a teacher, a law clerk and legal secretary and a department manager for an auto finance company. She was on the Florida State Children's Commission and wrote regulations for the county's License Board for Children's Centers and Family Day Care Homes. She ran unsuccessful compaigns for the local school board in 1972 and the legislature in 1974.

Sample founded the Alliance for Conservation of Natural Resources, served as a president of Save Our Bays and was a vice president and regional director for the Florida Wildlife Federation. She led a legal effort to halt construction of Interstate 275 in St. Petersburg until an environmental impact statement was commissioned. For her environmental work, she received the Outstanding Conservationist Award of the Rod and Gun Club and the Florida Wildlife Special Service Award.

Political career
In the 1976 state elections, Sample was first elected to the Florida House of Representatives for the 61st district. She defeated Laurent W. Belanger for the Republican nomination. After the election, she prefiled two dozen bills before the opening of the 1977 legislative session, one of which would have required auto inspectors to have a "pleasant disposition". She was actively involved in environmental issues, having opposed local dredge-and-fill efforts before being elected to the legislature. In the 1978 state elections, she received 62,401 votes, compared to the 45,932 votes received by her Democratic opponent Don O'Leary. In the 1980 legislative session, Sample opposed a bill to criminalize marital rape, the only female representative to do so.

Sample became a representative for the 54th district in 1982. She was the oldest member of the House. In the 1988 state elections, she lost her seat to Democrat Lars Hafner, who had previously challenged her in 1986. In the subsequent elections two years later, she lost again to Hafner, receiving 12,925 votes compared to his 21,225. She ran for a seat on the St. Petersburg City Council in 1995 but was not elected.

Personal life
Sample was married to Richard L., a banker and real estate appraiser who died in 1985. The couple had three children: Richard, Dorothy and Dianne.

Death
Sample died on September 1, 2002, at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida. She was 91. Her papers are held in the Southern Women Legislators Collection at the University of Mississippi.