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| Photograph (detail), 1950, Collection of U.S. House of Representatives |
BOYKIN, Frank William, a Representative from Alabama; born in Bladon Springs, Choctaw
County, Ala., February 21, 1885; attended the public schools; moved to
Fairford, Ala., in 1890 and was employed as a clerk in a store and later as
store manager; moved to Malcolm, Ala., in 1905 and engaged in the manufacture
of railroad cross ties; moved to Mobile, Ala., in 1915 and was occupied with
real estate, farming, livestock, timber, lumber, and naval stores in southern
Alabama; during the First World War served as an official in shipbuilding
companies; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-fourth Congress to fill the
vacancy caused by the resignation of John McDuffie; reelected to the
Seventy-fifth and to the twelve succeeding Congresses and served from July 30,
1935, to January 3, 1963; chairman, Committee on Patents (Seventy-eighth and
Seventy-ninth Congresses); unsuccessful candidate for renomination in 1962 to
the Eighty-eighth Congress; convicted in July 1963, on charges of conspiracy
and conflict-of-interest by using his congressional influence to gain dismissal
of mail fraud charges against J. Kenneth Edlin; served six months probation,
fined, and received full pardon from President Johnson in 1965; returned to his
many business activities; died in Washington, D.C., March 12, 1969; interment
in Pine Crest Cemetery, Mobile, Ala.
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