Thomas J. Walsh

Thomas J. Walsh
United States Senator
from Montana
In office
March 4, 1913  March 2, 1933
Preceded by Joseph M. Dixon
Succeeded by John E. Erickson
Personal details
Born Thomas James Walsh
(1859-06-12)June 12, 1859
Two Rivers, Wisconsin
Died March 2, 1933(1933-03-02) (aged 73)
near Wilson, North Carolina
Political party Democratic
Profession Law

Thomas James Walsh (June 12, 1859  March 2, 1933) was an American lawyer and Democratic Party politician from Helena, Montana who represented Montana, in the US Senate from 1913 to 1933.

He had a national reputation as a liberal but died before he could serve President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, who chose him as Attorney General.[1]

Background

Walsh was born in Two Rivers, Wisconsin, the son of Irish Catholic immigrants, Bridget (Comer) and Felix Walsh, an active Democrat and a member of the local school board. He spent some time teaching in the public schools in Wisconsin. Walsh then went to University of Wisconsin–Madison and University of Wisconsin Law School and was admitted to the Wisconsin Bar. Walsh moved to Redfield, Dakota Territory to practice law. In August 1889, he married Elinor McClements (1859-1917). They had a daughter, Genevieve, born in 1890. Moving to Helena, Montana in 1890,[2][3] Walsh worked on injury cases involving railroad accidents and on copper litigation.

Career

Walsh became a leader in Democratic Party politics in Helena, Montana. He was defeated in the 1906 election for Congress. He was elected to the US Senate in 1912, serving until his death in 1933. He emerged as a spokesman for President Woodrow Wilson in the Senate and supported the graduated income tax, farm loans, and women's suffrage. He managed Wilson's western campaign against Charles Evans Hughes, which resulted in Wilson's very narrow re-election . Walsh, unlike many Irish Catholics, supported Wilson's foreign policy and voted for war against Germany in 1917. In 1919, he supported Wilson's peace plans and the League of Nations. In 1918, he ran for re-election, and in an unusual three-way election that included him, former State Representative Oscar M. Lanstrum as the Republican nominee, and US Representative Jeannette Rankin as the National Party nominee, narrowly won his second term. When Walsh ran for re-election in 1924, he defeated Frank Bird Linderman by a solid margin. In 1930, Walsh ran for re-election to what would be his fourth and final term in the Senate, and defeated Albert J. Galen in a landslide.

During his tenure in the Senate, Walsh gained fame for his legal ability in the Judiciary Committee and on the floor.

In the 1920s, Walsh headed the Senate investigation into the Teapot Dome scandal that involved top officials of the administration of President Warren G. Harding.[4] He was chairman of the Democratic National Convention in New York in 1924 and in Chicago in 1932. Walsh opposed child labor and supported women's suffrage and, unlike most other Catholics, Prohibition.

In 1933, Walsh was nominated for the post of Attorney General by incoming President Franklin Roosevelt. In late February, he secretly married Mina Nieves Perez Chaumont de Truffin, but less than a week later, he died of a heart attack on the train to Washington for Roosevelt's inauguration.[4]

His funeral service was held in the Chamber of the United States Senate, and he was interned in Resurrection Cemetery, Helena.[5]

See also

References

  1. Tribune Staff. "125 Montana Newsmakers: Sen. Thomas J. Walsh". Great Falls Tribune. Retrieved August 26, 2011.
  2. Ruthmansdorfer, Paul. "Thomas J. (James) Walsh". Two Rivers Economic Ddevelopment. City of Two Rivers, Wisconsin. Archived from the original on April 16, 2013.
  3. Hernon, Joseph Martin (2016). "6". Profiles in Character: Hubris and Heroism in the U.S. Senate, 1789-1996: Hubris and Heroism in the U.S. Senate, 1789-1996. Routledge. ISBN 9781315479514.
  4. 1 2 Cook, Blanche Wiesen (1999). Eleanor Roosevelt, Vol. 2: 19331938. Viking. p. 28. ISBN 067080486X. Retrieved November 26, 2012.
  5. WALSH, Thomas James, (1859 - 1933)

Further reading

  • Bates, J. Leonard (ed.). Tom Walsh in Dakota Territory: Personal Correspondence of Senator Thomas J. Walsh and Elinor C. McClements (1966).
  • Bates, J. Leonard. Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana: Law and Public Affairs, from TR to FDR. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1999.
  • United States Congress. "Thomas J. Walsh (id: W000104)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  • "Walsh, Thomas James" at American National Biography Online
U.S. Senate
Preceded by
Joseph M. Dixon
U.S. Senator from Montana
19131933
Succeeded by
John E. Erickson
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