Note: This is just one of
1,162
family groupings listed on
The Political Graveyard web site.
These families each have three or more politician members,
all linked together by blood, marriage or adoption.
This specific family group is a subset of the
much larger Three Thousand
Related Politicians group. An individual may be listed
with more than one subset.
These groupings — even the names of the groupings,
and the areas of main activity — are the
result of a computer algorithm working with the data I have,
not the choices of any historian or genealogist.
|
Peter Rawson Taft (1785-1867) —
of Vermont.
Born in Uxbridge, Worcester
County, Mass., April
14, 1785.
Member of Vermont state legislature, 1820.
Died in Cincinnati, Hamilton
County, Ohio, January
1, 1867 (age 81 years, 262
days).
Interment at Spring
Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, Ohio.
|
|
John Davis (1787-1854) —
of Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass.
Born in Northborough, Worcester
County, Mass., January
13, 1787.
Whig. Lawyer; U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts 5th District, 1825-34; Governor of
Massachusetts, 1834-35, 1841-43; resigned 1835; U.S.
Senator from Massachusetts, 1835-41, 1845-53.
Died in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., April
19, 1854 (age 67 years, 96
days).
Interment at Worcester
Rural Cemetery, Worcester, Mass.
|
|
John Prescott Bigelow (1797-1872) —
also known as John P. Bigelow —
of Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.
Born in Groton, Middlesex
County, Mass., August
25, 1797.
Member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1828; secretary
of state of Massachusetts, 1836-43; mayor of
Boston, Mass., 1849-52.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., July 4,
1872 (age 74 years, 314
days).
Interment at Mt.
Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Timothy
Bigelow and Lucy (Prescott) Bigelow (1771-1852); married, March 9,
1824, to Louisa A. Brown; third cousin twice removed of Daniel
M. Prescott, John
Albion Andrew, Cyrus
Dan Prescott and Charles
Pinckney Holbrook Nason (1842-1937); third cousin thrice removed
of John
Forrester Andrew, Henry
Hersey Andrew, Arlington
Ansel Parrish and Columbus
E. Parrish; fourth cousin of Nathan
Read; fourth cousin once removed of Isaac
Davis, Rufus
Heaton, Alexander
Wheelock Thayer, Alvarus
Payson Adams, John
Ogden Bigelow and Merton
William Fairbank. |
| | Political family: Weeks-Bigelow-Andrew-Prescott
family of Massachusetts and New York (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Isaac Davis (1799-1883) —
of Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass.
Born in Northborough, Worcester
County, Mass., June 2,
1799.
Democrat. Lawyer; bank
director; member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1843-54; mayor
of Worcester, Mass., 1856, 1858, 1861; defeated, 1849 (Citizens),
1851, 1861 (Citizens), 1867 (Citizens); delegate to Democratic
National Convention from Massachusetts, 1860,
1864;
candidate for Governor of
Massachusetts, 1861.
Died in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., April 1,
1883 (age 83 years, 303
days).
Interment at Worcester
Rural Cemetery, Worcester, Mass.
|
|
George Bancroft (1800-1891) —
of Massachusetts.
Born in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., October
3, 1800.
Democrat. U.S. Collector of Customs, 1832-34; delegate to Democratic
National Convention from Massachusetts, 1844;
candidate for Governor of
Massachusetts, 1844; U.S.
Secretary of the Navy, 1845-46; U.S. Minister to Great Britain, 1846-49; Prussia, 1867-71; Germany, 1871-74.
Congregationalist.
Elected to the Hall
of Fame for Great Americans in 1910.
Died in Washington,
D.C., January
17, 1891 (age 90 years, 106
days).
Interment at Worcester
Rural Cemetery, Worcester, Mass.
|
|
Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen (1817-1885) —
also known as Frederick T. Frelinghuysen —
of Newark, Essex
County, N.J.
Born in Millstone, Somerset
County, N.J., August
4, 1817.
Republican. Lawyer;
delegate to Republican National Convention from New Jersey, 1860;
New
Jersey state attorney general, 1861-66; defeated, 1857; U.S.
Senator from New Jersey, 1866-69, 1871-77; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1881-85.
Dutch
Reformed.
Died in Newark, Essex
County, N.J., May 20,
1885 (age 67 years, 289
days).
Interment at Mt.
Pleasant Cemetery, Newark, N.J.
|
|
James Campbell Hopkins (1819-1877) —
also known as James C. Hopkins —
of Granville, Washington
County, N.Y.; Madison, Dane
County, Wis.
Born in Pawlet, Rutland
County, Vt., April
27, 1819.
Lawyer;
postmaster at Granville,
N.Y., 1850-55; member of New York
state senate 13th District, 1854-55; U.S.
District Judge for the Western District of Wisconsin, 1870-77;
died in office 1877.
Died in Madison, Dane
County, Wis., September
3, 1877 (age 58 years, 129
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
John Milton Thayer (1820-1906) —
also known as John M. Thayer —
of Omaha, Douglas
County, Neb.
Born in Bellingham, Norfolk
County, Mass., January
24, 1820.
Republican. Member
Nebraska territorial council, 1860; general in the Union Army
during the Civil War; U.S.
Senator from Nebraska, 1867-71; Governor
of Wyoming Territory, 1875-78; Governor of
Nebraska, 1887-91, 1891-92.
Died in Lincoln, Lancaster
County, Neb., March
19, 1906 (age 86 years, 54
days).
Interment at Wyuka
Cemetery, Lincoln, Neb.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Elias Nelson Thayer (1773-1833) and Ruth (Staples) Thayer
(1775-1851); married, December
17, 1842, to Mary Laura Albee (1818-1892); granduncle of Arthur
Laban Bates; second cousin twice removed of Samuel
Adams (1722-1803), John
Adams and Almur
Stiles Whiting; third cousin once removed of Joseph
Allen, John
Quincy Adams (1767-1848) and Peter
Rawson Taft; third cousin twice removed of Daniel
Chapin (1761-1821) and Wilson
Henry Fairbank; fourth cousin of Willard
J. Chapin, George
Washington Adams, Charles
Francis Adams, Alphonso
Taft and Eli
Thayer; fourth cousin once removed of Jonathan
Elmer, Ebenezer
Elmer, Eli
Elmer, Elijah
Boardman, John
Allen, William
Bostwick, Elijah
Hunt Mills, Daniel
Warner Bostwick, Daniel
Chapin (1791-1878), Chester
William Chapin, Graham
Hurd Chapin, Alexander
Wheelock Thayer, William
Aldrich, William
Vincent Wells, Staley
N. Wood, Edward
M. Chapin, John
Quincy Adams (1833-1894), Charles
Phelps Taft, William
Nelson Taft, Brooks
Adams, John
Alden Thayer, William
Howard Taft and Henry
Waters Taft. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Fairbanks-Adams
family of Massachusetts; Saltonstall-Weeks
family of Massachusetts; Adams-Waite-Forshee-Cowan
family of Dexter, Michigan; Pike
family of Lubec, Maine; Adams-Rusling
family (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Thayer County,
Neb. is named for him. |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National
Governors Association biography |
|
|
John Chandler Bancroft Davis (1822-1907) —
also known as Bancroft Davis —
of Orange
County, N.Y.
Born in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., December
29, 1822.
Lawyer;
newspaper
correspondent; member of New York
state assembly from Orange County 1st District, 1869; U.S.
Minister to Germany, 1874-77; Judge
of U.S. Court of Claims, 1878-82; official reporter, U.S. Supreme
Court, 1883.
Died in Washington,
D.C., December
28, 1907 (age 84 years, 364
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Charles Courtney Pinkney Holden (1827-1905) —
also known as Charles C. P. Holden —
of Chicago, Cook
County, Ill.
Born in Groton, Grafton
County, N.H., August
9, 1827.
Served in the U.S. Army during the Mexican War; land agent for
Illinois Central Railroad;
helped to organize and build the Chicago and Illinois River Railroad;
Republican candidate for mayor
of Chicago, Ill., 1862, 1871; Democratic candidate for
Presidential Elector for Illinois, 1872;
Cook
County Commissioner, 1874.
Member, Sons of
the American Revolution.
Died in Matteson, Cook
County, Ill., February
5, 1905 (age 77 years, 180
days).
Interment at Oakwood
Cemetery, Joliet, Ill.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Phineas Hemmenway Holden (1792-1872) and Elizabeth 'Betsey'
(Parker) Holden (1792-1869); married, September
17, 1855, to Sarah Jane Reynolds (1836-1873); married, April
28, 1875, to Louise R. Jones (divorced 1880); married, July 11,
1888, to Thelena M. McCoy; first cousin of Ebenezer
Gregg Danforth Holden; first cousin once removed of Charles
Wayne Holden; first cousin twice removed of Charlotte
H. McMorran; third cousin of Winfield
Scott Holden; third cousin twice removed of Luther
Lawrence, John
Davis and Abbott
Lawrence; fourth cousin once removed of Isaac
Davis, Alonzo
M. Garcelon, Amos
Adams Lawrence, John
Chandler Bancroft Davis, Samuel
Abbott Green, Horace
Davis and Gordon
Woodbury (1863-1924). |
| | Political families: Chandler-Hale
family of Portland, Maine; Lee-Randolph
family; Woodbury-Holden
family of Massachusetts and New Hampshire; Holden-Davis-Lawrence-Garcelon
family of Massachusetts; Starkweather-Pendleton
family of Preston, Connecticut (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
|
|
Horace Davis (1831-1916) —
of San
Francisco, Calif.
Born in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., March
16, 1831.
Republican. U.S.
Representative from California 1st District, 1877-81; delegate to
Republican National Convention from California, 1884;
Presidential Elector for California, 1884.
Died in San
Francisco, Calif., July 12,
1916 (age 85 years, 118
days).
Interment at Cypress
Lawn Memorial Park, Colma, Calif.
|
|
Chauncey Mitchell Depew (1834-1928) —
also known as Chauncey M. Depew —
of Peekskill, Westchester
County, N.Y.; Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Peekskill, Westchester
County, N.Y., April
23, 1834.
Republican. Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from Westchester County 3rd District, 1862-63; secretary
of state of New York, 1864-65; Westchester
County Clerk, 1867; delegate to Republican National Convention
from New York, 1868,
1892,
1896,
1900,
1904,
1908,
1912,
1916,
1920
(speaker),
1924;
Liberal Republican candidate for Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1872; president, later chairman, New York
Central Railroad;
candidate for Republican nomination for President, 1888;
U.S.
Senator from New York, 1899-1911.
French
Huguenot, Dutch,
and English
ancestry. Member, Union
League; Society
of the Cincinnati; Skull
and Bones.
Died, of bronchial
pneumonia, in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., April 5,
1928 (age 93 years, 348
days).
Entombed at Hillside
Cemetery, Cortlandt town, Westchester County, N.Y.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Isaac Depew (1800-1869) and Martha Minot (Mitchell) Depew
(1810-1885); married, November
9, 1871, to Elise Hegeman (1848-1893); married, December
28, 1901, to May Palmer; second great-grandnephew of Roger
Sherman; second cousin twice removed of Roger
Sherman Baldwin, Sherman
Day, Ebenezer
Rockwood Hoar, William
Maxwell Evarts and George
Frisbie Hoar; second cousin four times removed of Aaron
Burr; third cousin once removed of Simeon
Eben Baldwin, Rockwood
Hoar, Sherman
Hoar, Maxwell
Evarts and Arthur
Outram Sherman (born1864); third cousin twice removed of Charles
Robert Sherman and Merton
William Fairbank; third cousin thrice removed of Reuben
Bostwick Heacock; fourth cousin of John
Frederick Addis and Roger
Sherman Hoar; fourth cousin once removed of John
Adams Dix, Charles
Taylor Sherman, William
Tecumseh Sherman, Lampson
Parker Sherman, John
Sherman, Charles
Warren Fairbanks, Newton
Hamilton Fairbanks, John
Stanley Addis and Archibald
Cox. |
| | Political families: Sherman
family of Connecticut; Sewall-Adams-Quincy
family of Maine; Hoar-Sherman
family of Massachusetts; Baldwin-Greene-Upson-Hoar
family of Connecticut (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | The village
of Depew, New
York, is named for
him. |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Image source: The Parties and The Men
(1896) |
|
|
Ebenezer Gregg Danforth Holden (1834-1912) —
also known as Ebenezer G. D. Holden —
of Michigan.
Born in Cuyahoga
County, Ohio, February
18, 1834.
Secretary
of state of Michigan, 1875-78.
Member, Grange.
Died in Coquille, Coos
County, Ore., August
20, 1912 (age 78 years, 184
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Edward Livingston Davis (1834-1912) —
also known as Edward L. Davis —
of Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass.
Born in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., April
22, 1834.
Lawyer;
manufacturer of ironwork,
including railroad
wheels; director of banks and
railroads;
mayor
of Worcester, Mass., 1874; defeated (Citizens), 1874; member of
Massachusetts
state senate, 1876.
Episcopalian.
Died in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., March 2,
1912 (age 77 years, 315
days).
Interment at Worcester
Rural Cemetery, Worcester, Mass.
|
|
Wilson Henry Fairbank (b. 1836) —
also known as Wilson H. Fairbank —
of Warren, Worcester
County, Mass.
Born in Warren, Worcester
County, Mass., April 3,
1836.
Republican. Contractor;
alternate delegate to Republican National Convention from
Massachusetts, 1904.
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
John Barnard Fairbank (1839-1908) —
also known as John B. Fairbank —
of Central City, Lawrence
County, S.Dak.
Born in Oakham, Worcester
County, Mass., August
8, 1839.
Major in the Union Army during the Civil War; gold miner;
member of South
Dakota state senate 38th District, 1897-98.
Died in Deadwood, Lawrence
County, S.Dak., April
28, 1908 (age 68 years, 264
days).
Interment at Mt.
Moriah Cemetery, Deadwood, S.Dak.
|
|
Winfield Scott Holden (1845-1919) —
also known as Winfield S. Holden —
of Covington, Kenton
County, Ky.; Cincinnati, Hamilton
County, Ohio.
Born in New Richmond, Clermont
County, Ohio, February
22, 1845.
U.S. Collector of Internal Revenue for the 6th Kentucky District,
1879.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., August
30, 1919 (age 74 years, 189
days).
Burial
location unknown.
| |
Presumably named
for: Winfield
Scott |
| | Relatives: Son of William Green Holden
(1800-1882) and Malinda (Shinkle) Holden (1813-1882); married, November
8, 1866, to Elizabeth Amanda Batelle (1846-1921); third cousin of
Charles
Courtney Pinkney Holden and Ebenezer
Gregg Danforth Holden; third cousin once removed of Charles
Wayne Holden; third cousin twice removed of Luther
Lawrence, John
Davis, Abbott
Lawrence and Charlotte
H. McMorran; fourth cousin once removed of Isaac
Davis, Alonzo
M. Garcelon, Amos
Adams Lawrence, John
Chandler Bancroft Davis, Samuel
Abbott Green, Horace
Davis and Gordon
Woodbury (1863-1924). |
| | Political families: Chandler-Hale
family of Portland, Maine; Lee-Randolph
family; Woodbury-Holden
family of Massachusetts and New Hampshire; Holden-Davis-Lawrence-Garcelon
family of Massachusetts; Starkweather-Pendleton
family of Preston, Connecticut (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Merton William Fairbank (1847-1918) —
also known as Merton W. Fairbank —
of Mt. Morris, Genesee
County, Mich.
Born in Sweden town, Monroe
County, N.Y., September
10, 1847.
Republican. Served in the Union Army during the Civil War; farmer;
member of Michigan
state house of representatives from Genesee County 2nd District,
1905-08.
Congregationalist.
Died in 1918
(age about
70 years).
Interment at Oakwood Cemetery, Genesee Township, Genesee County, Mich.
|
|
John Davis (1851-1902) —
Born in Newton, Middlesex
County, Mass., September
16, 1851.
Private secretary to U.S. Secretary of State Hamilton
Fish, 1872-73; lawyer; Judge
of U.S. Court of Claims, 1885-1902; died in office 1902.
Died in Washington,
D.C., May 5,
1902 (age 50 years, 231
days).
Interment at Arlington
National Cemetery, Arlington, Va.
|
|
Charles Warren Fairbanks (1852-1918) —
also known as Charles W. Fairbanks —
of Indianapolis, Marion
County, Ind.
Born in a log
cabin near Unionville Center, Union
County, Ohio, May 11,
1852.
Republican. Lawyer;
general solicitor for Ohio Southern Railroad,
and for the Dayton and Ironton Railroad;
president, Terre Haute and Peoria Railroad;
director and general solicitor, Cincinnati, Hamilton, and Dayton Railroad;
delegate to Republican National Convention from Indiana, 1896
(Temporary
Chair; speaker;
chair, Committee
to Notify Vice-Presidential Nominee), 1900,
1904,
1912;
U.S.
Senator from Indiana, 1897-1905; resigned 1905; Vice
President of the United States, 1905-09; defeated, 1916;
candidate for Republican nomination for President, 1908,
1916.
Died, from renal
failure, in Indianapolis, Marion
County, Ind., June 4,
1918 (age 66 years, 24
days).
Interment at Crown
Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Ind.
|
|
Alexander Warren Fairbank (1852-1922) —
also known as Alexander W. Fairbank —
of Chazy, Clinton
County, N.Y.
Born in Rouses Point, Clinton
County, N.Y., December
19, 1852.
Republican. Physician;
member of New York
state assembly from Clinton County, 1914-15.
Member, American Medical
Association; Freemasons;
Knights
Templar.
Died in Clinton
County, N.Y., 1922
(age about
69 years).
Interment at Riverview Cemetery, Chazy, N.Y.
|
|
Newton Hamilton Fairbanks (1859-1937) —
also known as Newton H. Fairbanks —
of Springfield, Clark
County, Ohio.
Born in Unionville Center, Union
County, Ohio, December
10, 1859.
Republican. Lawyer;
Presidential Elector for Ohio, 1924.
Died in Clark
County, Ohio, March
22, 1937 (age 77 years, 102
days).
Interment at Ferncliff
Cemetery, Springfield, Ohio.
|
|
Charles Wayne Holden (b. 1860) —
also known as Charles Holden —
of Grand Rapids, Kent
County, Mich.
Born in Grand Rapids, Kent
County, Mich., February
7, 1860.
Republican. Insurance
agent; member of Michigan
state house of representatives from Kent County 1st District,
1895-96; acting postmaster at Grand
Rapids, Mich., 1914; U.S. Collector of Internal Revenue for the
4th Michigan District, 1921.
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Janet Ayer Fairbank (1878-1951) —
also known as Janet Fairbank; Janet Ayer; Mrs.
Kellogg Fairbank —
of Chicago, Cook
County, Ill.
Born in Chicago, Cook
County, Ill., June 7,
1878.
Democrat. Author;
woman suffrage activist; chair, managing board, Chicago Lying-In Hospital;
delegate to Democratic National Convention from Illinois, 1924,
1932
(alternate); member of Democratic
National Committee from Illinois, 1924-28.
Female.
Died December
28, 1951 (age 73 years, 204
days).
Burial
location unknown.
| |
Relatives:
Daughter of Benjamin Franklin Ayer (1825-1903) and Janet (Hopkins)
Ayer (1848-1929); sister of Margaret Ayer Barnes (1886-1967; author);
married, May 29,
1900, to Kellogg Fairbank (1869-1939; second cousin once removed
of John
Barnard Fairbank); granddaughter of James
Campbell Hopkins (1819-1877). |
| | Political family: Davis
family of Massachusetts (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Wikipedia
article |
| | Fiction by Janet Ayer Fairbank: At
Home |
| | Fiction about Janet Ayer Fairbank: , The
Lion's Den — , The
Bright Land — , Rich
Man, Poor Man — , The
Cortlandts of Washington Square — , Idle
Hands — , The
Smiths |
| | Image source: U.S. passport application
(1923) |
|
|
Livingston Davis (1882-1932) —
also known as Livy Davis —
of Milton, Norfolk
County, Mass.; Brookline, Norfolk
County, Mass.
Born in Worcester, Worcester
County, Mass., August
13, 1882.
Banker;
director of railroads;
Consul
for Belgium in Boston,
Mass., 1930-32.
Member, American
Antiquarian Society.
In ill health for some time, he died from a self-inflicted
gunshot,
in Brookline, Norfolk
County, Mass., January
11, 1932 (age 49 years, 151
days).
Interment at Worcester
Rural Cemetery, Worcester, Mass.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Edward
Livingston Davis and Maria Louisa (Robbins) Davis (1843-1916);
married, April
23, 1908, to Alice Gardiner (1885-1963; divorced 1922); married,
August
31, 1927, to Georgia Appleton (1891-1976); grandson of Isaac
Davis (1799-1883); great-grandnephew of John
Davis (1787-1854); first cousin twice removed of John
Chandler Bancroft Davis and Horace
Davis; second cousin once removed of John
Davis (1851-1902); third cousin once removed of John
Barnard Fairbank, Henry
Cabot Lodge Jr. and John
Davis Lodge; third cousin twice removed of Merton
William Fairbank and George
Cabot Lodge; fourth cousin once removed of Wilson
Henry Fairbank, Alexander
Warren Fairbank, Charles
Warren Fairbanks and Newton
Hamilton Fairbanks. |
| | Political families: Holden-Davis-Lawrence-Garcelon
family of Massachusetts; Fairbanks-Adams
family of Massachusetts; Davis
family of Massachusetts; Saltonstall-Davis-Frelinghuysen-Appleton
family of Massachusetts; Weeks-Bigelow-Andrew-Prescott
family of Massachusetts and New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Image source: Boston Globe, January 12,
1932 |
|
|
Vinton Chapin (1900-1982) —
of Dublin, Cheshire
County, N.H.; Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.; Cambridge, Middlesex
County, Mass.
Born in Paris, France
of American parents, April
17, 1900.
Served in the U.S. Marine Corps during World War I; Foreign Service
officer; U.S. Vice Consul in Prague, 1929; U.S. Consul in Port-au-Prince, as of 1943; The Hague, as of 1947; U.S. Ambassador to Luxembourg, 1957-60.
Died in Woburn, Middlesex
County, Mass., September
15, 1982 (age 82 years, 151
days).
Interment at Swan
Point Cemetery, Providence, R.I.
|
|
Leone Fairbanks Burrell (1900-1959) —
also known as Leone Burrell —
of Ypsilanti, Washtenaw
County, Mich.
Born in Adrian, Lenawee
County, Mich., February
18, 1900.
Republican. School
teacher; alternate delegate to Republican National Convention
from Michigan, 1940.
Female.
Died, from cervical
cancer, in Ypsilanti, Washtenaw
County, Mich., June 15,
1959 (age 59 years, 117
days).
Interment at Denton Cemetery, Van Buren Township, Wayne County, Mich.
|
|
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (1902-1985) —
of Beverly, Essex
County, Mass.
Born in Nahant, Essex
County, Mass., July 5,
1902.
Republican. Newspaper
reporter; member of Massachusetts
state house of representatives, 1933-36; U.S.
Senator from Massachusetts, 1937-44, 1947-53; resigned 1944;
defeated, 1952; delegate to Republican National Convention from
Massachusetts, 1940
(member, Resolutions
Committee), 1948,
1952,
1956,
1960;
colonel in the U.S. Army during World War II; U.S. Representative to
United Nations, 1953-60; candidate for Vice
President of the United States, 1960; U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam, 1963-64, 1965-67; , 1967-68; Germany, 1968-69; candidate for Republican nomination for
President, 1964.
Died in Beverly, Essex
County, Mass., February
27, 1985 (age 82 years, 237
days).
Interment at Mt.
Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
|
|
John Davis Lodge (1903-1985) —
of Westport, Fairfield
County, Conn.
Born in Washington,
D.C., October
20, 1903.
Republican. Lawyer;
professional actor
in 1933-40, appearing in movies
such as Little Women, The Scarlet Empress, The
Little Colonel, and In Like Flint; served in the U.S. Navy
during World War II; U.S.
Representative from Connecticut 4th District, 1947-51; Governor of
Connecticut, 1951-55; delegate to Republican National Convention
from Connecticut, 1952
(speaker),
1960;
U.S. Ambassador to Spain, 1955-61; Argentina, 1969-73; Switzerland, 1983-85; candidate for U.S.
Senator from Connecticut, 1964; delegate
to Connecticut state constitutional convention 4th District, 1965.
Member, American
Legion; Veterans of
Foreign Wars; Phi
Beta Kappa.
Collapsed while finishing a
speech to the Women's National Republican Club, and died less
than an hour later at St. Clare's Hospital,
Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., October
29, 1985 (age 82 years, 9
days).
Interment at Arlington
National Cemetery, Arlington, Va.
|
|
Douglas Stanley Fairbanks (1910-1981) —
also known as Douglas S. Fairbanks —
of Cadillac, Wexford
County, Mich.
Born November
21, 1910.
Democrat. Tavern
proprietor; alternate delegate to Democratic National Convention
from Michigan, 1960;
candidate for Michigan
state house of representatives from Wexford District, 1960;
candidate for mayor
of Cadillac, Mich., 1961.
Died March
27, 1981 (age 70 years, 126
days).
Interment at Maple
Hill Cemetery, Cadillac, Mich.
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George Cabot Lodge (b. 1927) —
also known as George C. Lodge —
of Massachusetts.
Born July 7,
1927.
Republican. Newspaper
reporter; director of information, U.S. Department of Labor,
1954-58; Assistant U.S. Secretary of Labor for International Affairs,
1958-61; candidate for U.S.
Senator from Massachusetts, 1962; delegate to Republican National
Convention from Massachusetts, 1964;
university
professor.
Still living as of 2018.
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