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Senate Years of Service: 1904-1911 Party: Republican
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| Library of Congress |
DICK, Charles William Frederick, a Representative and a Senator from Ohio; born in Akron, Summit County, Ohio,
November 3, 1858; attended the public schools; studied law; admitted to the bar in 1894 and
commenced practice in Akron, Ohio; served in the Eighth Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry, in Cuba
during the war with Spain; resumed the practice of law; auditor of Summit County, Ohio 1886-1894;
secretary of the Republican National Committee 1896-1900; elected as a Republican to the Fifty-fifth
Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Stephen A. Northway; reelected to three
succeeding Congresses and served from November 8, 1898, to March 23, 1904, when he resigned,
having been elected Senator; chairman, Committee on Militia (Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth
Congresses); elected March 2, 1904, as a Republican to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy
caused by the death of Marcus A. Hanna; on the same day also was elected for the ensuing term and
served from March 23, 1904, to March 3, 1911; unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1911;
chairman, Committee on Indian Depredations (Fifty-eighth Congress), Committee on Mines and
Mining (Fifty-ninth through Sixty-first Congresses); resumed the practice of law in Washington, D.C.,
and Akron, Ohio; unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination for Senator in 1922; died in
Akron, Ohio, March 13, 1945; interment in Glendale Cemetery.
BibliographyPetit, Mary Loretta. Charles Dick of Akron, Politician.
Masters thesis, Catholic University of America, 1948; Schlup, Leonard. The Spanish-American War
Letters of Charles Dick to William McKinley. International Review of History and Political
Science 20 (May 1983): 1-10.
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