|
Senate Years of Service: 1897-1905 Party: Republican
 |
| Library of Congress |
FAIRBANKS, Charles Warren, a Senator from Indiana and a Vice President of the United States;
born near Unionville Center, Union County, Ohio, May 11, 1852; attended the
common schools and graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, in
1872; agent of the Associated Press in Pittsburgh, Pa., and in Cleveland, Ohio;
studied law; admitted to the Ohio bar in 1874; moved to Indianapolis, Ind., the
same year and commenced practice; unsuccessful candidate for election to the
United States Senate in 1893; appointed a member of the United States and
British Joint High Commission which met in Quebec in 1898 for the adjustment of
Canadian questions; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate in
1896; reelected in 1902 and served from March 4, 1897, until his resignation
March 3, 1905, having been elected Vice President of the United States;
chairman, Committee on Immigration (Fifty-fifth Congress), Committee on Public
Buildings and Grounds (Fifty-sixth through Fifty-eighth Congresses); elected
Vice President of the United States in 1904 on the Republican ticket with
Theodore Roosevelt and served from March 4, 1905, to March 3, 1909;
unsuccessful candidate for Vice President of the United States on the
Republican ticket with Charles E. Hughes for President in 1916; resumed the
practice of law in Indianapolis, Ind., where he died June 4, 1918; interment in
Crown Hill Cemetery.
Bibliography
American National Biography;
Dictionary of American Biography; Gould, Lewis L., ed.
Charles Warren Fairbanks and the Republican National Convention of 1900: A
Memoir.
Indiana Magazine of History 77 (December 1981): 358-72;
Madison, James H. Charles Warren Fairbanks and Indiana Republicanism. In
Gentlemen from Indiana: National Party Candidates, 1836-1940,
edited by Ralph D. Gray, pp. 171-88. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Bureau,
1977.
|