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Senate Years of Service: 1923-1935 Party: Democrat
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| Library of Congress |
DILL, Clarence Cleveland, a Representative and a Senator from Washington; born near Fredericktown, Knox
County, Ohio, September 21, 1884; attended the public schools; engaged in teaching 1901-1903;
graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, 1907; newspaper reporter in Cleveland,
Ohio, in 1907; taught in the high schools at Dubuque, Iowa, 1907-1908, and in Spokane, Wash.,
1908-1910; studied law; admitted to the bar in 1910 and commenced practice in Spokane, Wash.;
deputy prosecuting attorney of Spokane County 1911-1913; private secretary to the governor 1913;
elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-fourth Congress; reelected to the Sixty-fifth Congress (March 4,
1915-March 3, 1919); unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1918; resumed the practice of law in
Spokane, Wash.; elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 1922; reelected in 1928 and
served from March 4, 1923, to January 3, 1935; was not a candidate for renomination in 1934;
chairman, Committee on Interstate Commerce (Seventy-third Congress); engaged in the practice of
law in Washington, D.C., and Spokane, Wash., 1935-1939; unsuccessful candidate for Governor in
1940; unsuccessful candidate for election in 1942 to the Seventy-eighth Congress; member of the
Columbia Basin Commission of the State of Washington 1945-1948; special assistant to the United
States Attorney General 1946-1953; resumed the practice of law in Spokane, Wash., where he died
January 14, 1978; interment in Fairmont Memorial Park.
BibliographyDill, Clarence C. How Congress Makes Laws. Washington, D.C.: Ransdell, 1936; Irish, Kerry E. Clarence C. Dill: The Life and
Times of a Western Politician. Pullman, Wash.: Washington State University Press, 2000.
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